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The importance of dominance and genotype-by-environment interactions on grain yield variation in a large-scale public cooperative maize experiment
Author(s) -
Anna R Rogers,
Jeffrey C. Dunne,
M. Cinta Romay,
Martin Bohn,
Edward S. Buckler,
Ignacio A. Ciampitti,
Jode W. Edwards,
David Ertl,
Sherry FlintGarcia,
Michael A. Gore,
Christopher Graham,
Candice N. Hirsch,
Elizabeth E. Hood,
David C. Hooker,
J. Knoll,
Elizabeth C. Lee,
Aaron J. Lorenz,
Jonathan P. Lynch,
John McKay,
Stephen P. Moose,
Seth C. Murray,
Rebecca Nelson,
Torbert Rocheford,
James C. Schnable,
Patrick S. Schnable,
Rajandeep S. Sekhon,
Maninder P. Singh,
Margaret E. Smith,
Nathan M. Springer,
Kurt D. Thelen,
Peter R. Thomison,
Addie Thompson,
Mitch Tuinstra,
Jason G. Wallace,
Randall J. Wisser,
Wenwei Xu,
A. R. Gilmour,
Shawn M. Kaeppler,
Natalia de León,
James B. Holland
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
g3 genes genomes genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.468
H-Index - 66
ISSN - 2160-1836
DOI - 10.1093/g3journal/jkaa050
Subject(s) - biology , gene–environment interaction , genetic architecture , trait , quantitative trait locus , dominance (genetics) , hybrid , variance (accounting) , environmental data , quantitative genetics , genetic variation , genotype , ecology , genetics , agronomy , computer science , gene , accounting , business , programming language
High-dimensional and high-throughput genomic, field performance, and environmental data are becoming increasingly available to crop breeding programs, and their integration can facilitate genomic prediction within and across environments and provide insights into the genetic architecture of complex traits and the nature of genotype-by-environment interactions. To partition trait variation into additive and dominance (main effect) genetic and corresponding genetic-by-environment variances, and to identify specific environmental factors that influence genotype-by-environment interactions, we curated and analyzed genotypic and phenotypic data on 1918 maize (Zea mays L.) hybrids and environmental data from 65 testing environments. For grain yield, dominance variance was similar in magnitude to additive variance, and genetic-by-environment variances were more important than genetic main effect variances. Models involving both additive and dominance relationships best fit the data and modeling unique genetic covariances among all environments provided the best characterization of the genotype-by-environment interaction patterns. Similarity of relative hybrid performance among environments was modeled as a function of underlying weather variables, permitting identification of weather covariates driving correlations of genetic effects across environments. The resulting models can be used for genomic prediction of mean hybrid performance across populations of environments tested or for environment-specific predictions. These results can also guide efforts to incorporate high-throughput environmental data into genomic prediction models and predict values in new environments characterized with the same environmental characteristics.

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