Artículos de revistas
Quantitative Trait Loci Mapping and The Genetic Basis of Heterosis in Maize and Rice
Fecha
2008Registro en:
GENETICS, v.180, n.3, p.1707-1724, 2008
0016-6731
10.1534/genetics.107.082867
Autor
GARCIA, Antonio Augusto Franco
WANG, Shengchu
MELCHINGER, Albrecht E.
ZENG, Zhao-Bang
Institución
Resumen
Despite its importance to agriculture, the genetic basis of heterosis is still not well understood. The main competing hypotheses include dominance, overdominance, and epistasis. NC design III is an experimental design that. has been used for estimating the average degree of dominance of quantitative trait 106 (QTL) and also for studying heterosis. In this study, we first develop a multiple-interval mapping (MIM) model for design III that provides a platform to estimate the number, genomic positions, augmented additive and dominance effects, and epistatic interactions of QTL. The model can be used for parents with any generation of selling. We apply the method to two data sets, one for maize and one for rice. Our results show that heterosis in maize is mainly due to dominant gene action, although overdominance of individual QTL could not completely be ruled out due to the mapping resolution and limitations of NC design III. For rice, the estimated QTL dominant effects could not explain the observed heterosis. There is evidence that additive X additive epistatic effects of QTL could be the main cause for the heterosis in rice. The difference in the genetic basis of heterosis seems to be related to open or self pollination of the two species. The MIM model for NC design III is implemented in Windows QTL Cartographer, a freely distributed software.