A critical evaluation of methods used for S-genotyping: from trees to DNA level

  • Halász J
  • Hegedűs A
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Abstract

Fruit setting behaviour of fruit trees remains to be in the focus of plant breeders and growers. Realizing that most species (cherry, apple, pear etc.) are self-incompatible and certain cultivars are cross-incompatible, mutual fertility properties and their reliable determination are of great interest. This review gives a comprehensive description of all known S-genotyping procedures, i.e. the classical fruit set analysis after open field test crosses; pollen tube growth monitoring with fluorescent microscopy; stylar ribonuclease electrophoresis (using different types of isoelectric focusing and 2-dimension polyacrilamide gel electrophoresis); as well as the most recent polymerase chain reaction based DNA-level analyses and DNA sequencing. The review presented not only gives a compilation of the bases of the methods described but also provides a critical evaluation and a comparative characterization of their applicability.

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Halász, J., & Hegedűs, A. (2006). A critical evaluation of methods used for S-genotyping: from trees to DNA level. International Journal of Horticultural Science, 12(2). https://doi.org/10.31421/ijhs/12/2/631

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