| Literature DB >> 26390990 |
Chunhui Li1, Yongxiang Li1, Peter J Bradbury2, Xun Wu1, Yunsu Shi1, Yanchun Song1, Dengfeng Zhang1, Eli Rodgers-Melnick3, Edward S Buckler4,5, Zhiwu Zhang6,7, Yu Li8, Tianyu Wang9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A genome-wide association study (GWAS) is the foremost strategy used for finding genes that control human diseases and agriculturally important traits, but it often reports false positives. In contrast, its complementary method, linkage analysis, provides direct genetic confirmation, but with limited resolution. A joint approach, using multiple linkage populations, dramatically improves resolution and statistical power. For example, this approach has been used to confirm that many complex traits, such as flowering time controlling adaptation in maize, are controlled by multiple genes with small effects. In addition, genotyping by sequencing (GBS) at low coverage not only produces genotyping errors, but also results in large datasets, making the use of high-throughput sequencing technologies computationally inefficient or unfeasible.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26390990 PMCID: PMC4578237 DOI: 10.1186/s12915-015-0187-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Fig. 1Construction of effective recombination bins from raw SNPs in NAM populations. a SNP genotypes of both NAM populations were obtained by genomic sequencing. a and b represent genotypes from common parents and genotypes from diverse parents, respectively. Genotypes indicated by a rectangular box were incorrect due to raw sequencing errors. b Bin map was constructed with sequencing SNPs by recombination breakpoint location. 0 and 2 represent genotypes from common parents and genotypes from diverse parents, respectively. A hidden Markov model was used to correct the error of genotype data
Fig. 2Cumulative distribution of recombination bin sizes within each family of a CN-NAM and b US-NAM
Fig. 3QTL allele effect size distributions for days to tasseling (DT) within the two maize NAM populations. a Additive allele estimates for the 18 DT QTLs for all 11 diverse parents relative to common parent HZS in CN-NAM. A total of 91 QTL alleles were significant at P < 0.05. b Additive allele estimates for the 29 DT QTLs for all 25 diverse parents relative to common parent B73 in US-NAM. A total of 232 QTL alleles were significant at P < 0.05
Fig. 4Comparison of QTL mapping results for days to tasseling (DT) among the US-NAM, CN-NAM, and CN-US NAM populations. a QTL mapping results for DT. The physical distance for each chromosome is represented in Mb (Mega-base) units on the horizontal axis. Bar width represents QTL confidence interval. Arrows represent the physical positions of the known maize flowering-time genes overlapping with QTL. b Venn diagram showing numbers of unique and shared QTLs among US-NAM, CN-NAM, and CN-US NAM
Fig. 5QTL mapping for days to anthesis (DA) and days to silking (DS) with different marker density maps in US-NAM. a Composite genetic map constructed using 4,932 bins. b Composite genetic map consisting of 1,106 SNPs published by McMullen et al. [43]. Avg CI in (a) and (b) represented average QTL confidence interval for DA and DS, respectively