3 research outputs found

    Assessment of the Geographic Origin of Romanian Common Bean (<i>Phaseolus vulgaris</i> L.) Landraces Using Molecular Markers and Morphological Traits

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    The extreme weather that humanity has been confronting in recent years is the result of climate change. All over the world, unknown plant species are disappearing daily, which humankind has not discovered and will never know. Since 1900, the angiosperms and gymnosperms have been disappearing at a frequency of three species per year, but it is worrying that this rate of disappearance is up to 500 times higher currently. These data, correlated with the information provided by the United Nations (the world population will reach 10 billion by the year 2050) and FAO (food insecurity and the decrease of feedstock) lead to a crucial need to conserve and study plant germplasm. Therefore, plant germplasm conserved, especially in gene banks, can represent an important source for the development of varieties with an increased resistance to abiotic stress factors. Considering the origin of the current species of PhaseolusĀ vulgaris L. as being in two distinct centers with different gene pools (Andean and Mesoamerica), the aim of the article is to infer the ancestry of 27 landraces according to their sampling geographical origin and morphological and molecular traits based on DNA sequences of three genes associated with abiotic stress tolerance (drought and thermal stress): PvREB5A, PvDREB6B, and PvRPS4. Phaseolus vulgaris L. has two different centers of origin: the Mesoamerican and the Andean basins. In this research, 27 landraces were evaluated from different counties in Romania. Three genes, PvREB5A, PvDREB6B, and PvRPS4, were amplified by the PCR reaction, sequenced by the Sanger technique, and the data obtained were analyzed using MEGA XI software. For morphological data, the GraphPad Prism 9 software was used. According to PvDREB5A, 81.5% of all studied landraces belong to the Mesoamerican gene pool and 18.5% belong to the Andean. PvDREB6B revealed a high nucleotide and amino acid diversity between the Andean and Mesoamerican genotypes compared to the other evaluated genes. Also, the PvRPS4 gene from the chloroplast genome showed one SNP within its coding region, different for those two gene pools, which is directly involved in a nonsynonymous substitution. The morphological characteristics, such as weight for 100 seeds, length, height, width, weight, seed flatness, flatness index, seed elongation, and eccentricity index were determined. European landraces of Mesoamerican origin indicated a large seed size compared to Andean genotypes. This work can be a foundation for the identification of interesting traits that establish plant adaptation to abiotic stress and conserve landraces of common beans from genetic depletion

    The Modulatory Effects of Non-Thermal Plasma on Seedā€™s Morphology, Germination and Geneticsā€”A Review

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    Non-thermal plasma (NTP) is a novel and promising technique in the agricultural field that has the potential to improve vegetal material by modulating the expression of various genes involved in seed germination, plant immune response to abiotic stress, resistance to pathogens, and growth. Seeds are most frequently treated, in order to improve their ability to growth and evolve, but the whole plant can also be treated for a fast adaptive response to stress factors (heat, cold, pathogens). This review focuses mainly on the application of NTP on seeds. Non-thermal plasma treated seeds present both external and internal changes. The external ones include the alterations of seed coat to improve hydrophilicity and the internal ones refer to interfere with cellular processes that are later visible in metabolic and plant biology modifications. The usage of plasma aims to decrease the usage of fertilizers and pesticides in order to reduce the negative impact on natural ecosystem and to reduce the costs of production

    Genetic structure and variability parameters of Lathyrus sativus L. European collection

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    Grass pea (Lathyrus sativus L.) is a self-pollinating legume that is well adapted to changing climatic conditions. In our study, the collection of 25 accessions from different parts of Europe (7 from BiH, 2 from Romania, 4 from Portugal, 8 from Serbia, 2 from Bulgaria, 1 from Greece and 1 from Slovenia) was genetically assessed by 15 species-specific nSSR markers (Simple Sequence Repeat). Extraction of gDNA was performed from 3 to 10 individual young plants/genotypes of each accession using an automated magnetic procedure. PCR reaction mixtures and amplification were optimized for each primer pair under two-step touch-down PCR conditions. Fragment analysis was performed on a genetic analyzer (ABI 3130XL) together with the internal standard ROX500. Accurate allele lengths were recorded from the electropherograms in GeneMapper6.0 software. The diversity parameters and genetic structure of the Lathyrus collection was observed using various population genetic programmes such as Arleqin, MSToolkit, GenAlEx, Populations, TreeView, and Structure
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