Cultivar fingerprinting and SNP-based pedigree reconstruction in Danish heritage apple cultivars utilizing genotypic data from multiple germplasm collections in the world

Bjarne Larsen*, Nicholas P. Howard, Caroline Denancé, Charles Eric Durel, Carsten Pedersen, Jonas Skytte af Sätra, Larisa Garkava-Gustavsson, Michela Troggio, Eric van de Weg

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Heirloom Danish apple cultivars are historically and pomologically important, part of the cultural heritage, and have valuable adaptation to regional climate conditions. However, lack of information about their genetic identity and pedigree relatedness with other cultivars hampers proper cultivar identification, germplasm curation, genebank management, and future regional breeding efforts. Many Danish apple cultivars are maintained in the national collection “The Pometum”, maintaining around 850 apple accessions. Additional material is maintained in public or private Danish collections. However, no information exists regarding genotypic duplicates between these collections and germplasm collections in other countries, pedigree inferences across collections, and genotypically unique accessions at the genebank level. To provide such information, 976 accessions from Denmark were genotyped with simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers and the Illumina Infinium 20K single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array. The resulting genotypic data were compared to large databases of genotypic data from germplasm collections in multiple countries to identify genotypic duplicates and conduct pedigree reconstruction. The germplasm maintains 305 unique genotypic profiles which were not found in other germplasm collections. The study exposed previously unknown synonyms, accessions not true-to-type, and novel pedigree relationships involving accessions from multiple collection sites. The most frequent parents of Danish germplasm were ‘Hvid Vinter Pigeon’ and ‘Cox’s Orange Pippin’ whereas ‘Reinette Franche’ was the most common grandparent. The accession-level information will benefit germplasm curation, cultivar identification, genebank management, and future breeding efforts, and shed new light on cultivar history and origin.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2397-2411
JournalGenetic Resources and Crop Evolution
Volume72
Issue number2
Early online date24 Aug 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • Cultivar identification
  • Cultivar parentage
  • Cultivar provenance
  • Genebank cross-collection comparison
  • Heirloom cultivars

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