Abstract:
Seed protein profiles of 47 accessions belonging to eleven species and four tribes of
grain legumes were studied, by extracting the total proteins from ten single seeds in each
accession and performing SDS-Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. All eleven species were
clearly recognizable from their protein banding patterns, but only Phaseolus vulgaris expressed
high intraspecific variations, followed by Lathyrus sativus. Variation among accessions
of other species was very limited. Cluster analysis, after quantifying the protein
bands, using UPGMA procedure, showed phylogenetic relationships which were in a good
concordance with species classification based on morphological characters. Accessions of
tribe Vicieae formed one cluster (Vicia faba, Lens culinaris, Pisum sativum, Lathyrus sativus
and Vicia ervilia) having nearly equal amounts of three categories of polypeptide:
high, moderate and low molecular weight. The second cluster was a small tribe of Cicereae
(Cicer arietinum accessions) having moderate and low molecular weight polypeptides.
Accessions of Phaseoleae tribe formed the third cluster (Phaseolus vulgaris, Vigna unguiculata
and Vigna radiata), having predominantly high molecular weight polypeptides. Finally,
the more distinct tribe, Aeschynomeneae (Arachis hypogaea accessions), formed a
separate cluster exhibiting a special banding pattern. A unique discrepancy was observed
about Glycine max, which belongs to Phaseoleae but was clustered with Cicereae.