| Literature DB >> 21115826 |
James Cockram1, Jon White, Diana L Zuluaga, David Smith, Jordi Comadran, Malcolm Macaulay, Zewei Luo, Mike J Kearsey, Peter Werner, David Harrap, Chris Tapsell, Hui Liu, Peter E Hedley, Nils Stein, Daniela Schulte, Burkhard Steuernagel, David F Marshall, William T B Thomas, Luke Ramsay, Ian Mackay, David J Balding, Robbie Waugh, Donal M O'Sullivan.
Abstract
Although commonplace in human disease genetics, genome-wide association (GWA) studies have only relatively recently been applied to plants. Using 32 phenotypes in the inbreeding crop barley, we report GWA mapping of 15 morphological traits across ∼500 cultivars genotyped with 1,536 SNPs. In contrast to the majority of human GWA studies, we observe high levels of linkage disequilibrium within and between chromosomes. Despite this, GWA analysis readily detected common alleles of high penetrance. To investigate the potential of combining GWA mapping with comparative analysis to resolve traits to candidate polymorphism level in unsequenced genomes, we fine-mapped a selected phenotype (anthocyanin pigmentation) within a 140-kb interval containing three genes. Of these, resequencing the putative anthocyanin pathway gene HvbHLH1 identified a deletion resulting in a premature stop codon upstream of the basic helix-loop-helix domain, which was diagnostic for lack of anthocyanin in our association and biparental mapping populations. The methodology described here is transferable to species with limited genomic resources, providing a paradigm for reducing the threshold of map-based cloning in unsequenced crops.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21115826 PMCID: PMC3003063 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1010179107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205