Random
amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis was applied to
pearl millet genotypes in order to assess the degree of
polymorphisms within and among genotypes and to investigate
if this approach was suitable for genetic studies of pearl
millet. 20 genotypes were evaluated using 30 different
10-mer primers of arbitrary sequence. Most of the primers
did not reveal any polymorphism; however 12 primers revealed
scorable polymorphism between genotypes of pearl millet and
these can be further evaluated for use in genetic mapping.
Pair-wise comparisons of unique and shared polymorphic
amplification products were generated by Jaccard’s
similarity co-efficient. These similarity co-efficients were
employed to construct a dendrogram showing phylogenetic
relationships using unweighted paired group method with
arithmetic averages (UPGMA). The UPGMA analysis indicated a
higher similarity between genotype PT 2835/1 and PT 5552 and
lowest similarity index was observed between PT 5554 and PT
2835/1. Analysis of RAPD data appears to be helpful in
determining the genetic relationship among 20 pearl millet
genotypes. The associations among the 20 genotypes were also
examined with Principle components analysis (PCA) from
Jaccard’s similarity co-efficient and it is more informative
to analyze the extreme genotypes.
Key
words:
Random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD), genetic diversity,
pearl millet, principle component analysis (PCA)