| Literature DB >> 25128435 |
Sandra K Truong1, Ryan F McCormick1, Daryl T Morishige2, John E Mullet3.
Abstract
Recombinant inbred populations of many plant species exhibit more heterozygosity than expected under the Mendelian model of segregation. This segregation distortion causes the overestimation of recombination frequencies and consequent genetic map expansion. Here we build upon existing genetic models of differential zygotic viability to model a heterozygote fitness term and calculate expected genotypic proportions in recombinant inbred populations propagated by selfing. We implement this model using the existing open-source genetic map construction code base for R/qtl to estimate recombination fractions. Finally, we show that accounting for excess heterozygosity in a sorghum recombinant inbred mapping population shrinks the genetic map by 213 cM (a 13% decrease corresponding to 4.26 fewer recombinations per meiosis). More accurate estimates of linkage benefit linkage-based analyses used in the identification and utilization of causal genetic variation.Entities:
Keywords: R/qtl; excess heterozygosity; genetic map construction; genetic map expansion; plant recombinant inbred lines
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25128435 PMCID: PMC4199702 DOI: 10.1534/g3.114.012468
Source DB: PubMed Journal: G3 (Bethesda) ISSN: 2160-1836 Impact factor: 3.154
Figure 1Estimated recombination frequencies, , under excess heterozygosity and Mendelian models. Recombination frequencies estimated from genotype frequencies under Mendelian expectations (h = 0.5) vs. under modeling a global heterozygosity advantage (h = 0.6373) at generation t = 7 of a selfing population. This shows that if the population was retaining excess heterozygosity (at a rate of 63.73% each generation as opposed to the Mendelian 50%), then estimating recombination fractions under Mendelian expectations would lead to overestimation of the recombination frequency underlying the data and subsequent map expansion.
Figure 2Excess heterozygosity in a sorghum mapping population. Box plot of genotype frequencies of 398 individuals of the BT×623 × IS3620C recombinant inbred population. Each individual has a percentage of its genotypes that are homozygous or heterozygous for a BT×623 parental allele, A, and IS3620C parental allele, a. The dashed red lines represent the expected genotype frequencies under the assumptions of Mendelian segregation. The expected heterozygous frequency is lower than the median observed.
Figure 3Accounting for excess heterozygosity shrinks the sorghum genetic map. This plot shows the genetic position of 10,081 markers for two genetic maps. For each chromosome, the genetic map on the left is calculated under the Mendelian segregation model. The genetic map on the right is calculated under the excess heterozygosity model. For all chromosomes (#1−10), the map shrinks by accounting for excess heterozygosity. The coloring of the markers correspond to the percentage of heterozygosity at that locus (no heterozygosity, white, to high (>11%) heterozygosity, purple). The expected heterozygosity of an F7 RIL population is 1.6% and the observed heterozygosity in the BT×623 × IS3620C population was 6.7% as depicted on the color bar. Faint gray lines connect a marker’s position in one map with its corresponding position in the other map.
Genetic maps estimated from the BT×623 × IS3620C sorghum recombinant inbred mapping population
| Chr | est.rf() | est.rf.exHet ( | est.rf.exHet ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 206.7 | 206.7 | 177.0 | 231.6 |
| 2 | 213.4 | 213.4 | 185.9 | 205.0 |
| 3 | 208.6 | 208.6 | 179.2 | 202.4 |
| 4 | 169.2 | 169.2 | 146.2 | 174.4 |
| 5 | 126.2 | 126.2 | 109.4 | 138.2 |
| 6 | 135.7 | 135.7 | 117.6 | 115.6 |
| 7 | 127.5 | 127.5 | 113.0 | 155.7 |
| 8 | 114.7 | 114.7 | 101.0 | 152.3 |
| 9 | 135.3 | 135.3 | 118.7 | 153.0 |
| 10 | 166.6 | 166.6 | 142.8 | 148.4 |
| Total | 1603.8 | 1603.8 | 1390.6 | 1676.6 |
Except for the map reported by Burow (which was treated as a fixed RIL), maps were estimated as a selfed F7 population. The est.rf() function uses R/qtl’s native recombination frequency calculations, whereas est.rf.exHet() uses the calculations detailed in the section Materials and Methods with the respective h values. The map produced by Burow from a subset of the BT×623 × IS3620C population is provided as reference. RIL, recombinant inbred line.