Genetic dissection of heterosis using epistatic association mapping in a partial NCII mating design


Autoria(s): Wen, Jia; Zhao, Xinwang; Wu, Guorong; Xiang, Dan; Liu, Qing; Bu, Su-Hong; Yi, Can; Song, Qijian; Dunwell, Jim M.; Tu, Jinxing; Zhang, Tianzhen; Zhang, Yuan-Ming
Data(s)

17/12/2015

Resumo

Heterosis refers to the phenomenon in which an F1 hybrid exhibits enhanced growth or agronomic performance. However, previous theoretical studies on heterosis have been based on bi-parental segregating populations instead of F1 hybrids. To understand the genetic basis of heterosis, here we used a subset of F1 hybrids, named a partial North Carolina II design, to perform association mapping for dependent variables: original trait value, general combining ability (GCA), specific combining ability (SCA) and mid-parental heterosis (MPH). Our models jointly fitted all the additive, dominance and epistatic effects. The analyses resulted in several important findings: 1) Main components are additive and additive-by-additive effects for GCA and dominance-related effects for SCA and MPH, and additive-by-dominant effect for MPH was partly identified as additive effect; 2) the ranking of factors affecting heterosis was dominance > dominance-by-dominance > over-dominance > complete dominance; and 3) increasing the proportion of F1 hybrids in the population could significantly increase the power to detect dominance-related effects, and slightly reduce the power to detect additive and additive-by-additive effects. Analyses of cotton and rapeseed datasets showed that more additive-by-additive QTL were detected from GCA than from trait phenotype, and fewer QTL were from MPH than from other dependent variables.

Formato

text

Identificador

http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/49598/1/Wen%20et%20al%20Sci%20Rep%2018376.pdf

Wen, J., Zhao, X., Wu, G., Xiang, D., Liu, Q., Bu, S.-H., Yi, C., Song, Q., Dunwell, J. M. <http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/view/creators/90000185.html>, Tu, J., Zhang, T. and Zhang, Y.-M. (2015) Genetic dissection of heterosis using epistatic association mapping in a partial NCII mating design. Scientific Reports, 5. 18376. ISSN 2045-2322 doi: 10.1038/srep18376 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep18376>

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Nature Publishing Group

Relação

http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/49598/

creatorInternal Dunwell, Jim M.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep18376

10.1038/srep18376

Direitos

cc_by_4

Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed