Genetic basis for broad interspecific compatibility in Solanum verrucosum 

William Behling

Plant J. 2025 Aug;123(4):e70426. doi: 10.1111/tpj.70426.

ABSTRACT

Solanum verrucosum Schlechtendal (2x = 2n = 24) is unique among the clade 4 Solanum Sect Petota species. In addition to being one of the only fully self-compatible diploid potato species, S. verrucosum is the only clade 4 species that lacks prezygotic interspecific reproductive barriers. This allows S. verrucosum to accept pollen from a broad range of Solanum species and thereby serving as a genetic “bridge” between the cultivated or primary potato gene pool and distantly related wild relatives in the tertiary gene pool. The genetic mechanisms underlying self-compatibility in Solanum often underpin interspecific compatibility interactions, which in S. verrucosum, has been attributed to the lack of S-RNase expression. Using an interspecific F2 mapping population (n = 150), we investigated the genetic mechanisms responsible for the lack of interspecific reproductive barriers in S. verrucosum. This F2 population was evaluated for the ability to accept pollen from two clade 1, 1 EBN species (S. pinnatisectum and S. tarnii); from which two QTL for interspecific compatibility were identified on chromosomes 1 and 11, explaining 56.6% of the phenotypic variation observed. To identify the genetic basis of interspecific compatibility, we generated a chromosome-scale genome assembly of S. verrucosum MSII1813-2 and performed gene expression profiling of reproductive organs. Differential gene expression of S-RNase, located within the chromosome 1 QTL, confirmed the central role of the S-locus and specifically, S-RNase, in interspecific compatibility. Discovery of a non-S-locus QTL is consistent with previous findings that other non-S-locus factors are necessary for interspecific compatibility in S. verrucosum.

PMID:40836693 | DOI:10.1111/tpj.70426