Artículo de revista
Comparative mapping reveals quantitative trait loci that affect spawning time in coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch)
Fecha
2012Registro en:
Genetics and Molecular Biology, 35, 2, 515-521 (2012)
Autor
Araneda, Cristián
Díaz, Nelson F.
Gómez, Gilda
López, María Eugenia
Iturra, Patricia
Institución
Resumen
Spawning time in salmonids is a sex-limited quantitative trait that can be modified by selection. In rainbow trout
(Oncorhynchus mykiss), various quantitative trait loci (QTL) that affect the expression of this trait have been discovered.
In this study, we describe four microsatellite loci associated with two possible spawning time QTL regions in
coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch). The four loci were identified in females from two populations (early and late
spawners) produced by divergent selection from the same base population. Three of the loci (OmyFGT34TUF,
One2ASC and One19ASC) that were strongly associated with spawning time in coho salmon (p < 0.0002) were previously
associated with QTL for the same trait in rainbow trout; a fourth loci (Oki10) with a suggestive association
(p = 0.00035) mapped 10 cM from locusOmyFGT34TUF in rainbow trout. The changes in allelic frequency observed
after three generations of selection were greater than expected because of genetic drift. This work shows that comparing
information from closely-related species is a valid strategy for identifying QTLs for marker-assisted selection
in species whose genomes are poorly characterized or lack a saturated genetic map.