Secondary metabolites content may clarify the traditional selection process of the greater yam cultivars (Dioscorea alata L.)

Dioscorea alata L. is one of the most widely grown and economically important yam species. Hundreds of accessions are maintained ex situ in germplasm collections and have been characterized with descriptors but new tools are still needed to assess tuber chemical composition. The objectives of the present study were to analyze saponins and catechins profiles in 388 D. alata cultivars (landraces) from distant geographical sources (Nigeria, Vietnam, Papua New Guinea and Vanuatu) and to compare them with those of 162 selected hybrids. The relationships between these compounds and tuber flesh oxidation and browning were also studied in order to understand their possible role in the ancient cultivars selection process. Dioscin and gracillin, the most documented Dioscorea saponins, were absent among the 550 D. alata cultivars and hybrids analyzed using HP-TLC. Two saponins and four catechins were quantitated, including epicatechin. Mean total catechins and saponins values were very low for most cultivars and higher mean values were found in hybrids. Correlation coefficients revealed possible relationships between total saponins and catechins contents with speed of oxidation, presence of mucilage and flour colour. Distribution of cultivars values within each country indicate that these were mostly selected for their low saponins and catechins contents through simple visual assessment. Metabolite profiles can be used to improve the phenotyping efficiency of D. alata hybrids generated through conventional breeding.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lebot, V., Malapa, R., Abraham, K., Molisale, T., Van Kien, N., Gueye, B., Waki, J.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Springer 2018-08
Subjects:dioscorea alata, domestication, saponins, tuber,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97862
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10722-018-0647-0
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-cgspace-10568-97862
record_format koha
spelling dig-cgspace-10568-978622023-12-08T19:36:04Z Secondary metabolites content may clarify the traditional selection process of the greater yam cultivars (Dioscorea alata L.) Lebot, V. Malapa, R. Abraham, K. Molisale, T. Van Kien, N. Gueye, B. Waki, J. dioscorea alata domestication saponins tuber Dioscorea alata L. is one of the most widely grown and economically important yam species. Hundreds of accessions are maintained ex situ in germplasm collections and have been characterized with descriptors but new tools are still needed to assess tuber chemical composition. The objectives of the present study were to analyze saponins and catechins profiles in 388 D. alata cultivars (landraces) from distant geographical sources (Nigeria, Vietnam, Papua New Guinea and Vanuatu) and to compare them with those of 162 selected hybrids. The relationships between these compounds and tuber flesh oxidation and browning were also studied in order to understand their possible role in the ancient cultivars selection process. Dioscin and gracillin, the most documented Dioscorea saponins, were absent among the 550 D. alata cultivars and hybrids analyzed using HP-TLC. Two saponins and four catechins were quantitated, including epicatechin. Mean total catechins and saponins values were very low for most cultivars and higher mean values were found in hybrids. Correlation coefficients revealed possible relationships between total saponins and catechins contents with speed of oxidation, presence of mucilage and flour colour. Distribution of cultivars values within each country indicate that these were mostly selected for their low saponins and catechins contents through simple visual assessment. Metabolite profiles can be used to improve the phenotyping efficiency of D. alata hybrids generated through conventional breeding. 2018-08 2018-11-02T15:07:54Z 2018-11-02T15:07:54Z Journal Article Lebot, V., Malapa, R., Abraham, K., Molisalé, T., Van Kien, N., Gueye, B. & Waki, J. (2018). Secondary metabolites content may clarify the traditional selection process of the greater yam cultivars (Dioscorea alata L.). Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution, 65(6), 1699-1709. 0925-9864 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97862 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10722-018-0647-0 BIOTECH & PLANT BREEDING en Other Limited Access 1699-1709 Springer Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic dioscorea alata
domestication
saponins
tuber
dioscorea alata
domestication
saponins
tuber
spellingShingle dioscorea alata
domestication
saponins
tuber
dioscorea alata
domestication
saponins
tuber
Lebot, V.
Malapa, R.
Abraham, K.
Molisale, T.
Van Kien, N.
Gueye, B.
Waki, J.
Secondary metabolites content may clarify the traditional selection process of the greater yam cultivars (Dioscorea alata L.)
description Dioscorea alata L. is one of the most widely grown and economically important yam species. Hundreds of accessions are maintained ex situ in germplasm collections and have been characterized with descriptors but new tools are still needed to assess tuber chemical composition. The objectives of the present study were to analyze saponins and catechins profiles in 388 D. alata cultivars (landraces) from distant geographical sources (Nigeria, Vietnam, Papua New Guinea and Vanuatu) and to compare them with those of 162 selected hybrids. The relationships between these compounds and tuber flesh oxidation and browning were also studied in order to understand their possible role in the ancient cultivars selection process. Dioscin and gracillin, the most documented Dioscorea saponins, were absent among the 550 D. alata cultivars and hybrids analyzed using HP-TLC. Two saponins and four catechins were quantitated, including epicatechin. Mean total catechins and saponins values were very low for most cultivars and higher mean values were found in hybrids. Correlation coefficients revealed possible relationships between total saponins and catechins contents with speed of oxidation, presence of mucilage and flour colour. Distribution of cultivars values within each country indicate that these were mostly selected for their low saponins and catechins contents through simple visual assessment. Metabolite profiles can be used to improve the phenotyping efficiency of D. alata hybrids generated through conventional breeding.
format Journal Article
topic_facet dioscorea alata
domestication
saponins
tuber
author Lebot, V.
Malapa, R.
Abraham, K.
Molisale, T.
Van Kien, N.
Gueye, B.
Waki, J.
author_facet Lebot, V.
Malapa, R.
Abraham, K.
Molisale, T.
Van Kien, N.
Gueye, B.
Waki, J.
author_sort Lebot, V.
title Secondary metabolites content may clarify the traditional selection process of the greater yam cultivars (Dioscorea alata L.)
title_short Secondary metabolites content may clarify the traditional selection process of the greater yam cultivars (Dioscorea alata L.)
title_full Secondary metabolites content may clarify the traditional selection process of the greater yam cultivars (Dioscorea alata L.)
title_fullStr Secondary metabolites content may clarify the traditional selection process of the greater yam cultivars (Dioscorea alata L.)
title_full_unstemmed Secondary metabolites content may clarify the traditional selection process of the greater yam cultivars (Dioscorea alata L.)
title_sort secondary metabolites content may clarify the traditional selection process of the greater yam cultivars (dioscorea alata l.)
publisher Springer
publishDate 2018-08
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/97862
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10722-018-0647-0
work_keys_str_mv AT lebotv secondarymetabolitescontentmayclarifythetraditionalselectionprocessofthegreateryamcultivarsdioscoreaalatal
AT malapar secondarymetabolitescontentmayclarifythetraditionalselectionprocessofthegreateryamcultivarsdioscoreaalatal
AT abrahamk secondarymetabolitescontentmayclarifythetraditionalselectionprocessofthegreateryamcultivarsdioscoreaalatal
AT molisalet secondarymetabolitescontentmayclarifythetraditionalselectionprocessofthegreateryamcultivarsdioscoreaalatal
AT vankienn secondarymetabolitescontentmayclarifythetraditionalselectionprocessofthegreateryamcultivarsdioscoreaalatal
AT gueyeb secondarymetabolitescontentmayclarifythetraditionalselectionprocessofthegreateryamcultivarsdioscoreaalatal
AT wakij secondarymetabolitescontentmayclarifythetraditionalselectionprocessofthegreateryamcultivarsdioscoreaalatal
_version_ 1787231578267582464