Kw. Hilu et Ht. Stalker, GENETIC-RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN PEANUT AND WILD-SPECIES OF ARACHIS SECTARACHIS (FABACEAE) - EVIDENCE FROM RAPDS, Plant systematics and evolution, 198(3-4), 1995, pp. 167-178
Twenty-six accessions of wild Arachis species and domesticated peanuts
, A. hypogaea, introduced from South America were analyzed for random
amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD). The objective of the study was to in
vestigate inter- and intraspecific variation and affinities among spec
ies of sect. Arachis which have been proposed as possible progenitors
for the domesticated peanut. Ten primers resolved 132 DNA bands which
were useful for separating species and accessions. The most variation
was observed among accessions of A. cardenasii and A. glandulifera whe
reas the least amount of variation was observed in A. hypogaea and A.
monticola. The two tetraploid species could not be separated by using
RAPDs. Arachis duranensis was most closely related to the domesticated
peanut and is believed to be the donor of the A genome. The data indi
cated that A. batizocoi, a species previously hypothesized to contribu
te the B genome to A. hypogaea, was not involved in its evolution. The
investigation showed that RAPDs can be used to analyze both inter- an
d intraspecific variation in peanut species. Southern hybridization of
RAPD probes to blots containing RAPD of the Arachis species provided
information on genomic relationships and revealed the repetitive natur
e of the amplified DNA.