Authentication of Coffea arabica Varieties through DNA Fingerprinting and its Significance for the Coffee Sector

Author:

Pruvot-Woehl Solène1,Krishnan Sarada2,Solano William3,Schilling Tim4,Toniutti Lucile1,Bertrand Benoit5,Montagnon Christophe1

Affiliation:

1. World Coffee Research, 5 Avenue du Grand Chêne, 34270 Saint Mathieu de Tréviers, France

2. Denver Botanic Garden, 909 York Street, Denver, CO 80206, USA

3. Tropical Agricultural Research and Higher Education Center (CATIE), Turrialba 30501, Costa Rica

4. World Coffee Research, Babel Community, 70 Avenue de la République, 13000 Marseille, France

5. Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement (CIRAD), UMR IPME, Montpellier, France

Abstract

Abstract Background Locating the optimal varieties for coffee cultivation is increasingly considered a key condition for sustainable production and marketing. Variety performance varies when it comes to susceptibility to coffee leaf rust and other diseases, adaptation to climate change and high cup quality for specialty markets. But because of poor organization and the lack of a professional coffee seed sector, most existing coffee farms (and even seed lots and nurseries) do not know which varieties they are using. DNA fingerprinting of coffee planting material will contribute to professionalize the coffee seed sector. Objective The objective of this paper is i) to check in a large scale the robustness of the existing coffee DNA fingerprinting method based on eight Single Sequence Repeats markers (SRR) and ii) to describe how it can help in moving the needle towards a more professional seed sector. Method 2533 samples representing all possible genetic background of Arabica varieties were DNA fingerprinted with 8 SRR markers. The genetic diversity was analyzed and the genetic conformity to varietal references was assessed. Results The DNA fingerprinting method proved to be robust in authenticating varieties and trace back the history of C. arabica breeding and of the movement of C. arabica varieties. The genetic conformity of two important coffee varieties, Marseillesa and Gesha, proved to be 91% and 39% respectively. Conclusions DNA fingerprinting provides different actors in the coffee sector with a powerful new tool—farmers can verify the identity of their cultivated varieties, coffee roasters can be assured that marketing claims related to varieties are correct, and most of all, those looking to establish the a more professional and reliable coffee seed sector have a reliable new monitoring tool to establish and check genetic purity of seed stock and nursery plants. Highlights While C. arabica is primarily self-pollinating, even fixed line varieties appear to be drifting away from their original genetic reference due to uncontrolled cross pollination. A set of 8 SSR markers applied to the largest possible genetically diverse set of samples prove to discriminate between a wide range of varieties Figures confirm that genetic non conformity of coffee varieties can represent up to 61% of checked samples.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Pharmacology,Agronomy and Crop Science,Environmental Chemistry,Food Science,Analytical Chemistry

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