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Wild and Rare Self-Incompatibility Allele S17 Found in 24 Sweet Cherry (Prunus avium L.) Cultivars

Agnes Kivistik, Liina Jakobson, K. Kahu, Kristiina Laanemets

2021Plant Molecular Biology Reporter13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The pollination of self-incompatible diploid sweet cherry is determined by the S-locus alleles. We resolved the S-alleles of 50 sweet cherry cultivars grown in Estonia and determined their incompatibility groups, which were previously unknown for most of the tested cultivars. We used consensus primers SI-19/20, SI-31/32, PaConsI, and PaConsII followed by allele-specific primers and sequencing to identify sweet cherry S-genotypes. Surprisingly, 48% (24/50) of the tested cultivars, including 17 Estonian cultivars, carry the rare S-allele S 17 , which had initially been described in wild sweet cherries in Belgium and Germany. The S 17 -allele in Estonian cultivars could originate from ‘Leningradskaya tchernaya’ (S 6 |S 17 ), which has been extensively used in Estonian sweet cherry breeding. Four studied cultivars carrying S 17 are partly self-compatible, whereas the other 20 cultivars with S 17 have not been reported to be self-compatible. The recommended pollinator of seven self-incompatible sweet cherries is of the same S-genotype, including four with S 17 -allele, suggesting heritable reduced effectiveness of self-infertility. We classified the newly genotyped sweet cherry cultivars into 15 known incompatibility groups, and we proposed four new incompatibility groups, 64–67, for S-locus genotypes S 3 |S 17 , S 4 |S 17 , S 5 |S 17 , and S 6 |S 17 , respectively, which makes them excellent pollinators all across Europe. Alternatively, the frequency of S 17 might be underestimated in Eastern European populations and some currently unidentified sweet cherry S-alleles might potentially be S 17 .

Topics & Concepts

CultivarBiologyLocus (genetics)AlleleGenotypeHorticulturePrunus dulcisPrunusBotanyGeneticsGenePlant Reproductive BiologyPlant and animal studiesPlant Molecular Biology Research
Wild and Rare Self-Incompatibility Allele S17 Found in 24 Sweet Cherry (Prunus avium L.) Cultivars | Litcius