Volume 83, Issue 10 p. 1282-1291
Article

RFLP AND CYTOGENETIC EVIDENCE ON THE ORIGIN AND EVOLUTION OF ALLOTETRAPLOID DOMESTICATED peanut, Arachis hypogaea (Leguminosae)

Gary Kochert

Gary Kochert

Departments of Botany and Crop and Soil Sciences, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, 30602

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H. Thomas Stalker

H. Thomas Stalker

Crop Science Department, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, 27695

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Marcos Gimenes

Marcos Gimenes

Department of Genetics, UNESP, Botucatu, Brazil, 18618

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Leticia Galgaro

Leticia Galgaro

Department of Genetics, UNESP, Botucatu, Brazil, 18618

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Catalina Romero Lopes

Catalina Romero Lopes

Department of Genetics, UNESP, Botucatu, Brazil, 18618

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Kim Moore

Kim Moore

Agratech Seeds Inc, P.O. Box 644, Ashburn, Georgia, 31714

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First published: 01 October 1996
Citations: 161
Author for correspondence.

Abstract

Nuclear restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis was used to determine the wild diploid Arachis species that hybridized to form tetraploid domesticated peanut. Results using 20 previously mapped cDNA clones strongly indicated A. duranensis as the progenitor of the A genome of domesticated peanut and A. ipaensis as the B genome parent. A large amount of RFLP variability was found among the various accessions of A. duranensis, and accessions most similar to the A genome of cultivated peanut were identified. Chloroplast DNA RFLP analysis determined that A. duranensis was the female parent of the original hybridization event. Domesticated peanut is known to have one genome with a distinctly smaller pair of chromosomes (“A”), and one genome that lacks this pair. Cytogenetic analysis demonstrated that A. duranensis has a pair of “A” chromosomes, and A. ipaensis does not. The cytogenetic evidence is thus consistent with the RFLP evidence concerning the identity of the progenitors. RFLP and cytogenetic evidence indicate a single origin for domesticated peanut in Northern Argentina or Southern Bolivia, followed by diversification under the influence of cultivation.