| Literature DB >> 24885543 |
Tobias Würschum1, Wenxin Liu, Lucas Busemeyer, Matthew R Tucker, Jochen C Reif, Elmar A Weissmann, Volker Hahn, Arno Ruckelshausen, Hans Peter Maurer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Plant height is a prime example of a dynamic trait that changes constantly throughout adult development. In this study we utilised a large triticale mapping population, comprising 647 doubled haploid lines derived from 4 families, to phenotype for plant height by a precision phenotyping platform at multiple time points.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24885543 PMCID: PMC4040121 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2156-15-59
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genet ISSN: 1471-2156 Impact factor: 2.797
Summary statistics for plant height (cm) at the three developmental stages (PH1-PH3)
| Min | 30.05 | 60.40 | 65.72 |
| Mean | 62.79 | 105.70 | 102.90 |
| Max | 79.98 | 131.00 | 120.50 |
| 50.58** | 144.35** | 76.50** | |
| 12.05** | 10.26** | 13.81** | |
| 6.22 | 15.91 | 25.58 | |
| 0.93 | 0.96 | 0.91 |
Genotypic variance , genotype-by-environment interaction variance , error variance and heritability (h ). **significant at P < 0.01.
Figure 1Phenotypic development of plant height. Histograms of the phenotypic values for plant height at three developmental stages (PH1-PH3) for the entire population (All) and for each of the four families (DH06, DH07, EAW74, EAW78). The arrowheads indicate the phenotypic values of the parents.
Results of QTL mapping at three developmental stages (PH1-PH3) and fivefold cross-validation
| QTLDS | 15 | 18 | 8 |
| 77.7 | 78.3 | 73.1 | |
| QTLES | 14.4 | 13.1 | 7.8 |
| 77.2 | 76.1 | 70.4 | |
| 55.3 | 58.2 | 56.0 | |
| Relative bias | 28.4 | 23.5 | 20.5 |
Number of detected QTL (QTLDS), proportion of genotypic variance (%) explained by the detected QTL across all families in the data set (pG-DS), number of QTL (QTLES) and proportion of genotypic variance averaged over estimation sets (pG-ES) and averaged over test sets (pG-TS), and relative bias (%) in the estimation of pG.
Figure 2QTL for plant height at three developmental stages (PH1-PH3). The dashed horizontal line indicates the significance threshold.
Figure 3Venn diagram. Venn diagram for QTL detected for plant height at three developmental stages (PH1-PH3).
Figure 4Temporal contribution of QTL. Temporal development of the contribution of the QTL detected for any of the three time points (PH1-PH3) to the proportion of explained genotypic variance for plant height in the entire population.
Figure 5Epistatic QTL for plant height at three developmental stages (PH1-PH3). Following the approach suggested by Holland et al. [37] the significance threshold was set at P < 5.3e-5.