Bogdanova, V.S. and Kosterin, O.E. Inst. of Cytol. and Genet.
Russian Acad. of Sci.,
As
part of a study of chloroplast inheritance in pea we searched for a marker that
could distinguish the wild pea accession VIR320 (Pisum
sativum L.
ssp. elatius (Bieb.)
Schmahl.,
Most cultivated lines generated the expected 1129 bp fragment that lacked a restriction site. However VIR320 plastid DNA gave two fragments of about 800 and 300 bp after treatment with AspLEI (Fig. 1). Partial sequencing the rbcL gene in VIR320 showed that the restriction site was produced by a T to C nucleotide substitution in position 393 from the start codon, or position 325 from the beginning of the primer used. We assayed 27 samples of wild and cultivated peas, representing most of the presently recognized taxa. The electrophoretic pattern of DNA fragments formed upon AspLEI restriction of rbcL amplification product is shown in Fig. 1, presence or absence of the restriction site is indicated in Table 1. In addition, Table 1 includes both the initial taxonomic designation of an accession and its taxonomic status accepted here. In particular, following Townsend (2) and Davis (1), we consider all wild representatives of Pisum sativum L. (except for P. sativum ssp. abyssinicum (A. Br.) Berger) within the same subspecies P. sativum ssp. elatius (Bieb.) Schmahl.
(1A) (1B) |
|
Figure 1. Restriction fragments formed upon AspLEI digestion of rbcL amplification product from different pea accessions. Lane numbers correspond to No in Table 1. M – molecular weight marker 100-1000 bp.
We found that the restriction site for AspLEI in the gene rbcL is present in both accessions of Pisum fulvum Sibth et Smith, both accessions of P. sativum ssp. abyssinicum, in 4 of 11 accessions of P. sativum ssp. elatius (Bieb.) Schmahl., in neither of 2 accessions of P. s. ssp. transcaucasicum Govorov and in only one of 10 accessions of P. s. ssp. sativum (see Table 1). These data lead us to conclude that the restriction site probably was present in the ancestor of the genus Pisum and has been lost in some lineages of P. sativum ssp. elatius. A majority of the P. sativum ssp. sativum. germplasm appears to have inherited the derived (absence of restriction site) form of the cpDNA genome.
Table1. Pea accessions tested for the presence of AspLEI recognition site in rbcL gene.
No |
Accession number |
Collection location |
Wild or cultivated |
Original taxonomic designation |
Taxonomic designation used by authors |
Presence of AspLEI recognition site |
1 |
L93 |
Unknown |
Wild |
Pisum fulvum |
Pisum fulvum |
YES |
2 |
VIR6070 |
Palestine, foothills 30 km SW of Jerusalem |
Wild |
Pisum fulvum |
Pisum fulvum |
YES |
3 |
L100 |
Unknown |
Wild |
Pisum humile |
Pisum sativum ssp. elatius |
YES |
4 |
JI1794 |
|
Wild |
Pisum humile |
P. sativum ssp. elatius |
no |
5 |
Ps008 |
|
Wild |
Pisum humile |
P. sativum ssp. elatius |
no |
6 |
VIR7329 |
|
Wild |
P. sativum ssp. syriacum |
Pisum sativum ssp. elatius |
no |
7 |
VIR320 |
|
Wild |
P. sativum ssp. syriacum |
P. sativum ssp. elatius |
YES |
8 |
VIR320* |
- “ - |
Wild (?) |
P. sativum ssp. syriacum |
P. sativum ssp. elatius |
no |
9 |
VIR2521 |
|
Wild |
P. sativum ssp. syriacum |
P. sativum ssp. elatius |
YES |
10 |
VIR4014 |
Azerbaijan, Lenkoran, a winter wheat field |
Wild |
P. sativum ssp. elatius |
P. sativum ssp. elatius |
no |
11 |
VIR1851 |
|
Wild |
P. sativum ssp. elatius |
P. sativum ssp. elatius |
no |
12 |
VIR2524 |
North Galilea, in maccia Tarschich et Peccia |
Wild |
P. sativum ssp. elatius |
P. sativum ssp. elatius |
YES |
13 |
CE1 |
|
Wild |
P. sativum ssp. elatius |
P. sativum ssp. elatius |
no |
14 |
VIR2759 |
Unknown |
Cultivated |
P. sativum ssp. abyssinicum |
P. sativum ssp. abyssinicum |
YES |
15 |
WL1446 |
Unknown |
Cultivated |
P. sativum ssp. abyssinicum |
P. sativum ssp. abyssinicum |
YES |
16 |
VIR3249 |
Georgia, Gori |
Cultivated |
P. sativum ssp. transcaucasicum |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
no |
17 |
VIR4871 |
|
Cultivated |
P. sativum ssp. transcaucasicum |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
no |
18 |
VIR3913 |
The Pamirs, Shugnan District, Shakh-Dara, Pavdysh kishlak |
Cultivated |
P. sativum ssp. asiaticum |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
no |
19 |
VIR1975 |
|
Cultivated |
P. sativum ssp. asiaticum |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
YES |
20 |
VIR3954 |
Tadjikistan, Shugnan District, Emch kishlak |
Cultivated |
P. sativum ssp. asiaticum |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
no |
21 |
Sprint-1 |
A laboratory line de-rived from cv.
Avanti and VIR7036 ( |
Cultivated |
Hybrid P. sativum ssp. asiaticum x P. sativum ssp. sativum |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
no |
22 |
VIR2593 |
|
Cultivated |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
no |
23 |
VIR3429 |
|
? |
P. sativum ssp. sativum (characters as in “P. jomardi”) |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
no |
24 |
VIR7163 |
|
Cultivated |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
no |
25 |
VIR7006 |
|
Cultivated |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
no |
26 |
VIR2516 |
|
Cultivated |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
no |
27 |
VIR2172 |
|
Cultivated |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
P. sativum ssp. sativum |
no |
N – lane number of Fig. 1.
Acknowledgment: This
work was supported by the "Biosphere origin and evolution" project
of the
1.
2. Townsend, C.
1968.