Studies of Genetic Diversity in a Homogeneous Population of Withania Somnifera (L.) Dunal using DNA Based Markers
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Abstract
Withania somnifera (L.) Dunal (2n=48) family Solanaceae is an important medicinal plant that
contains many active ingredients used to treat various ailments. Most of the wild population
are seed raised and show a great deal of variations in active ingredients which could be due to
(i) genetic variations and (ii) environmental effects. The aim of the present study is to
investigate the genetic diversity in these seed raised plants of W. somnifera using morphological
and molecular markers (Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA: RAPD, Inter Simple Sequence
Repeats: ISSR and start codon targeted polymorphism: SCoT). Morphological studies revealed
that the leaves were oval or oblong in shape having pinnate venation. The average leaf length
and width recorded were 6.06 cm and 4.15 cm respectively. The average internodal distance
recorded was 3.39 cm and in an average 5-6 berries were recorded in a cluster. This data
provided limited morphological variations among plants. Therefore, PCR based amplification
of RAPD, ISSR and SCoT makers was caried out using isolated DNA of selected plants. RAPD
primers amplified 95 band out of which 94 were polymorphic (98%), followed by ISSR which
amplified 245 band and 229 were polymorphic (93.6%). The SCoT primers produced 200
bands out of which 118 were polymorphic (56.6%) thereby detecting least polymorphism
among the three markers. The dendrogram constructed grouped the 12 plants in 2 clusters, in
case of ISSR plant WS 12 was out grouped whereas dendrogram constructed based on the
combined data of all three molecular markers out grouped WS 06 plant. The PCA analysis for
RAPD and ISSR recorded 27.2%, 12.8% and 36.5%, 9.8% component variance respectively.
This study suggests that RAPD marker were more efficient in the detection of polymorphism
in W. somnifera population. The information gathered here might be used to develop
conservation plans and routine maintenance strategies for this population.
