| Literature DB >> 35451790 |
Isadora Cristina Martins Oliveira1, Arthur Bernardeli2, José Henrique Soler Guilhen1, Maria Marta Pastina3.
Abstract
For many plant and animal species, commercial products are hybrids between individuals from different genetic groups. For allogamous plant species such as maize, the breeding objective is to produce single-cross hybrid varieties from two inbred lines each selected in complementary groups. Efficient hybrid breeding requires methods that (1) quickly generate homozygous and homogeneous parental lines with high combining abilities, (2) efficiently choose among the large number of available parental lines the most promising ones, and (3) predict the performances of sets of non-phenotyped single-cross hybrids, or hybrids phenotyped in a limited number of environments, based on their relationship with another set of hybrids with known performances. The maize breeding community has been developing model-based prediction of hybrid performances well before the genomic era. This chapter (1) provides a reminder of the maize breeding scheme before the genomic era; (2) describes how genomic data were incorporated in the prediction models involved in different steps of genomic-based single-cross maize hybrid breeding; and (3) reviews factors affecting the accuracy of genomic prediction, approaches for optimizing GP-based single-cross maize hybrid breeding schemes, and ensuring the long-term sustainability of genomic selection.Entities:
Keywords: Genomic prediction; Hybrid breeding; Maize
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35451790 DOI: 10.1007/978-1-0716-2205-6_20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Methods Mol Biol ISSN: 1064-3745