🧬 Coffee Genetics & Genomics Hub

The Genetic Blueprint of Coffee

A comprehensive resource integrating genome assemblies, genetic diversity, molecular markers, breeding programs, QTL mapping, and phylogenetic analysis for Coffea arabica and Coffea canephora β€” from Ethiopia's center of origin to global germplasm collections.

124 Coffea Species [2][7]
37,729 SNP Loci [3][4][8]
848 Markers in Linkage Map [5][10]
98.6% Resistance Alleles [6][9]

Coffee Genetics: Foundation for Sustainable Production

Coffee genetic resources are the foundation for breeding disease-resistant, climate-resilient, and high-quality varieties essential for the sustainability of the global coffee industry.

Ethiopia, recognized as the center of origin for Coffea arabica, preserves approximately 99% of its wild genetic diversity [2][7][11]. This genetic heritage, combined with global germplasm collections and modern genomic tools, provides the resources needed to address challenges including coffee leaf rust, climate change, and evolving consumer preferences.

Our hub integrates cutting-edge research from 2024-2026 across six interconnected domains:

  • Genome Overview: Chromosome-level assemblies and comparative genomics [1]
  • Genetic Diversity: Population structure and domestication history [2][3][8][11]
  • Molecular Markers: SSR, SNP, KASP markers for breeding and authentication [4][5][12]
  • Breeding Programs: Gene pyramiding and marker-assisted selection [6][9]
  • QTL Mapping: Yield, plant height, and bean size QTLs [5][10]
  • Phylogenetics: Evolutionary relationships within the genus Coffea

Key Challenge

Without immediate, coordinated efforts to conserve and study remaining coffee genetic diversity, the industry risks being left defenseless against the combined onslaught of climate change, emerging pests and diseases, and shifting market requirements [2][7].

Latest Research (2025-2026)

  • Jan 2026: Multi-resistance gene pyramiding [6][9]
  • Dec 2025: RAD-seq diversity study [3][4][8]
  • Nov 2025: Vietnamese Robusta origins [1][7]
  • Oct 2025: KASP marker panel [12]

Research Domains

Six interconnected areas of coffee genetic and genomic research

Genome Overview
350-610k years

since allotetraploid formation of C. arabica [1]

  • Chromosome-level assemblies (2n=4x=44)
  • Conserved genome structure between subgenomes
  • Progenitors: C. canephora Γ— C. eugenioides
  • Split between wild/cultivar: 30.5k years ago
Explore Genome β†’
Genetic Diversity
37,729

SNP loci identified (He=0.3014) [3][4][8]

  • Three genetic groups: Bourbon/Typica, Ethiopian Native, Introgression
  • 99% wild diversity preserved in Ethiopia
  • South Sudanese wild populations new diversity
  • 47 selective sweep regions
Explore Diversity β†’
Molecular Markers
848+

markers in linkage map (3800 cM) [5][10]

  • SSR, SNP, Indel, KASP markers
  • 45 KASP markers for variety authentication
  • 98% disease resistance loci capture
  • 18.6% mislabeling detection rate
Explore Markers β†’
Breeding Programs
98.6%

resistance alleles in F2 population [6][9]

  • Gene pyramiding: 29% with 5 resistance genes
  • CLR resistance: SH3, CC-NBS-LRR, RLK, QTL-GL2, GL5
  • CBD resistance: Ck-1 locus
  • 100% leaf miner resistance in pyramided genotypes
Explore Breeding β†’
QTL Mapping
143

QTLs identified in C. canephora [7][10]

  • Yield, plant height, bean size QTLs
  • 22 linkage groups, 3800 cM map length
  • 60 shared QTLs across models
  • Connected population approach efficient
Explore QTL β†’
Phylogenetics
124

Coffea species across Africa, Asia, and islands [2][7]

  • Allotetraploid origin: C. canephora Γ— C. eugenioides
  • Wild arabica populations in South Sudan
  • Robusta genetic groups: ER, D, AG, OB
  • Yemen domestication center
Explore Phylogeny β†’

Featured Research (2025-2026)

Recent landmark studies in coffee genetics and genomics

View All Publications β†’

Timeline of Coffee Genetic Research

350,000 - 610,000 years ago

Polyploidy Event

Formation of allotetraploid Coffea arabica from hybridization of C. canephora and C. eugenioides [1]

30,500 years ago

Wild vs Cultivar Split

Split between wild accessions and cultivar progenitors, followed by period of migration [1]

1400s-1600s

Spread from Ethiopia to Yemen

Domestication and selection in Yemen; origin of Bourbon and Typica [2][7]

2007

Nucleotide Diversity Study

First comprehensive SNP and Indel discovery in coffee [4]

2016

QTL Mapping Study

848 SSR and SNP markers; 3800 cM map; yield, height, bean size QTLs [5][10]

2023

KASP Marker Panel

45 SNP markers for variety authentication; open-access dataset [12]

2024

Chromosome-Level Genome

Arabica genome assembly reveals diversification history [1]

2025

RAD-seq Diversity Study

37,729 SNP loci; 185 accessions; 98% disease resistance capture [3][4][8]

2025

Gene Pyramiding Study

98.6% resistance alleles; 29% with 5 genes; 100% leaf miner resistance [6][9]

2025

Vietnamese Robusta Study

126 accessions; Congolese origin; 45 core accessions [1][7]

Genomic & Genetic Resources

Open-access databases, germplasm collections, and bioinformatics tools

NCBI BioProject

PRJNA1309331: RAD-seq data from 185 coffee accessions [3]

Access β†’
Genesys PGR

Global plant genetic resources database for coffee collections

Access β†’
TropGeneDB

Molecular markers, QTLs, genetic maps, and germplasm data [5]

Access β†’
World Coffee Research

KASP marker panel (45 SNPs) for variety authentication [12]

Access β†’
Ethiopian Biodiversity Institute

4,000+ coffee accessions from center of origin [11]

Visit β†’
USDA ARS Coffee Research

Genomic data and breeding resources for robusta

Visit β†’

Major Coffee Germplasm Collections

Global network of genebanks preserving coffee genetic diversity

Chinese Germplasm Repository

952+

accessions; 185 RAD-seq validated [3][4][8]

IAC Brazil

4,000+

accessions; historic breeding material

CNRA CΓ΄te d'Ivoire

2,000+

West African robusta diversity

Ethiopian Biodiversity Institute

4,000+

wild and cultivated landraces [11]

CIAT Colombia

1,500+

Latin American collections

Meise Botanic Garden

500+

wild Coffea species [12]

View Complete Germplasm Database β†’

Key Publications by Domain

πŸ“˜ Genome

The genome and population genomics of allopolyploid Coffea arabica (2024). Nature Genetics [1]

πŸ“Š Genetic Diversity

Population structure and genetic diversity of a coffee germplasm collection in China (2025). Frontiers in Plant Science 16:1629553 [3][4][8]

🧬 Molecular Markers

Assessment of SNP markers for germplasm identification (2020). Frontiers in Plant Science 11:612593 [4]

🌱 Breeding

Exploring the Genetic Potential for Multi-Resistance to Rust (2025). Plants 14(3):391 [6][9]

πŸ“ˆ QTL Mapping

A genetic linkage map of coffee and QTL for yield, plant height, and bean size (2016). Tree Genetics & Genomes 12(1):5 [5][10]

🌍 Phylogenetics

The history and genetic diversity of cultivated Coffea arabica (2025). Advances in Botanical Research 114:1-28 [2][7]

Contribute to Coffee Genetic Research

Share your research data, access germplasm, or collaborate on coffee genetic improvement programs