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Genetic Architecture of a Rice Nested Association Mapping Population
Author(s) -
Christopher Fragoso,
Maria A. Moreno,
Zuoheng Wang,
Christopher Heffelfinger,
Lady Johanna Arbelaez,
John A Aguirre,
Natalia Franco,
Luz Elena Romero,
Karine Labadie,
Hongyu Zhao,
Stephen L. Dellaporta,
Mathias Lorieux
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
g3 genes genomes genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.468
H-Index - 66
ISSN - 2160-1836
DOI - 10.1534/g3.117.041608
Subject(s) - quantitative trait locus , biology , association mapping , japonica , allele , locus (genetics) , population , selfing , genetic diversity , genetic architecture , evolutionary biology , genetics , single nucleotide polymorphism , gene , genotype , botany , demography , sociology
Describing the genetic diversity in the gene pool of crops will provide breeders with novel resources for varietal improvement. Nested Association Mapping (NAM) populations are uniquely suited for characterizing parental diversity through the shuffling and fixation of parental haplotypes. Here, we describe a set of 1879 rice NAM lines created through the selfing and single-seed descent of F 1 hybrids derived from elite IR64 indica crossed with 10 diverse tropical japonica lines. Genotyping data indicated tropical japonica alleles were captured at every queried locus despite the presence of segregation distortion factors. Several distortion loci were mapped, both shared and unique, among the 10 populations. Using two-point and multi-point genetic map calculations, our datasets achieved the ∼1500 cM expected map size in rice. Finally, we highlighted the utility of the NAM lines for QTL mapping, including joint analysis across the 10 populations, by confirming known QTL locations for the trait days to heading.

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