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The Genetic Diversity of Enset (Ensete ventricosum) Landraces Used in Traditional Medicine Is Similar to the Diversity Found in Non-medicinal Landraces

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posted on 2022-05-20, 13:55 authored by GW Nuraga, T Feyissa, K Tesfaye, MK Biswas, T Schwarzacher, JS Borrell, P Wilkin, S Demissew, Z Tadele, JS Heslop-Harrison
Enset (Ensete ventricosum) is a multipurpose crop extensively cultivated in southern and southwestern Ethiopia for human food, animal feed, and fiber. It has immense contributions to the food security and rural livelihoods of 20 million people. Several distinct enset landraces are cultivated for their uses in traditional medicine. These landraces are vulnerable to various human-related activities and environmental constraints. The genetic diversity among the landraces is not verified to plan conservation strategy. Moreover, it is currently unknown whether medicinal landraces are genetically differentiated from other landraces. Here, we characterize the genetic diversity of medicinal enset landraces to support effective conservation and utilization of their diversity. We evaluated the genetic diversity of 51 enset landraces, of which 38 have reported medicinal value. A total of 38 alleles across the 15 simple sequence repeat (SSR) loci and a moderate level of genetic diversity (He = 0.47) were detected. Analysis of molecular variation (AMOVA) revealed that only 2.4% of the total genetic variation was contributed by variation among the medicinal and non-medicinal groups of landraces, with an FST of 0.024. A neighbor-joining tree showed four separate clusters with no correlation to the use-values of the landraces. Except for two, all “medicinal” landraces with distinct vernacular names were found to be genetically different, showing that vernacular names are a good indicator of genetic distinctiveness in these specific groups of landraces. The discriminant analysis of the principal components also confirmed the absence of distinct clustering between the two groups. We found that enset landraces were clustered irrespective of their use-value, showing no evidence for genetic differentiation between the enset grown for ‘medicinal’ uses and non-medicinal landraces. This suggests that enset medicinal properties may be restricted to a more limited number of genotypes, might have resulted from the interaction of genotype with the environment or management practice, or partly misreported. The study provides baseline information that promotes further investigations in exploiting the medicinal value of these specific landraces.

Funding

Addis Ababa University through the Thematic Research Project and GCRF Foundation Awards for Global Agricultural and Food Systems Research through “Modeling and genomics resources to enhance the exploitation of the sustainable and diverse Ethiopian starch crop enset and support livelihoods” project Reference BB/P02307X/1.

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Citation

Nuraga GW, Feyissa T, Tesfaye K, Biswas MK, Schwarzacher T, Borrell JS, Wilkin P, Demissew S, Tadele Z and Heslop-Harrison JS (2022) The Genetic Diversity of Enset (Ensete ventricosum) Landraces Used in Traditional Medicine Is Similar to the Diversity Found in Non-medicinal Landraces. Front. Plant Sci. 12:756182. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2021.756182

Author affiliation

Department of Genetics and Genome Biology

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Frontiers in Plant Science

Volume

12

Pagination

1-10

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

eissn

1664-462X

Acceptance date

2022-12-08

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2022-05-20

Language

en

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