use of breeding populations to detect and use qtl

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Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL Jean-Luc Jannink Iowa State University 2006 American Oat Workers Conference Fargo, ND 24 July 2006

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Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL. Jean-Luc Jannink Iowa State University 2006 American Oat Workers Conference Fargo, ND24 July 2006. Breeding Populations. Translation. Experimental Populations. Bi-parental cross. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Jean-Luc JanninkIowa State University

2006 American Oat Workers ConferenceFargo, ND 24 July 2006

Page 2: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

TranslationExperimentalPopulations

BreedingPopulations

Page 3: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

NI = 200

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

1 2 3 4 6 10 20 50Number of Effective Factors

Relative EfficiencyMarkers AlonePheno + Markers

Bi-parental cross

From Schön et al., yield, plant height, and grain moisture

all over here

Page 4: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Community Effort Needed• The number of “effective factors” influencing a

“highly quantitative” trait (e.g., grain yield): probably >50.

• Number of individuals needed to identify such small-effect QTL: probably ~ 1000.

Page 5: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

http://www.barleycap.org

Total:960 Lines / Year

3000 SNP / Line

Objective: Capitalize on phenotyping in breeding programs

96 Lines

96 Lines

96 Lines

96 Lines

96 Lines

96 Lines

96 Lines

96 Lines

Page 6: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

NI = 800

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

1 2 3 4 6 10 20 50Number of Effective Factors

Relative EfficiencyMarkers AlonePheno + Markers

Barley CAP

Page 7: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

QTL Detection in Breeding Populations

• P = E + G

• P = E + M + u

cov(ui,u j ) = 2θ ijσ u2

P = Xβ + Mα + Zu + e•

ˆ g i = M i ˆ α + ˆ u i•€

u ~ N(0, Aσ u2)

ˆ u i = 12

ˆ u s + ˆ u d( )

Page 8: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Requirement of Linkage Disequilibrium

• A specific typed marker allele always comes together with the same causal QTL allele

• This is Linkage Disequilibrium• Under what conditions does this occur?

P = Xβ + Mα + Zu + e• usually

Page 9: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

MutationOriginal Population State

AB

aB

aB

aB aB

ABAB

AB AB

aB

aB

aB aB

ABAB

Ab

A mutation arises

The b allele now always occurs in the presence of the A allele

Page 10: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Subpopulation structure / admixture

Population 1

B A a

B

aB

a B

Ba

B A

A BA B

Population 2

A b

A b

Ab

bA

b A

b A b

A A b

If the populations come together, the b allele again always occurs in the presence of the A allele

Page 11: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

StructureSpring barley &

2 vs. 6 row

Winter barley

Page 12: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Analysis Given Structure

• Each individual has a probability of belonging to each subpopulation: Q

• Each subpopulation has its own mean, vk

• But only one effect is associated with each allele,

P = Xβ + Qv + Mα + Zu + e•

P = Xβ + Mα + Zu + e•

Page 13: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

QTL x E?DryWet

QTL x E x Structure?

Page 14: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

NI = 800

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

1 2 3 4 6 10 20 50Number of Effective Factors

Relative EfficiencyMarkers AlonePheno + Markers

Barley CAP

Page 15: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Possible UseMake

Crosses

F2F3

F3F4

F1F2

F4 Spc Plt

Head Row

PLT

ALTYr1

Yr2

Yr3

Yr4

Yr5

MakeCrosses

F2F3

F3F4

F1F2

F4 Spc PltALT

Yr1

Yr2Yr3

GenotypeSelect on m

Increase in NZ

Contributephenotypegenotype

data to THT

Page 16: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Key Question

• What level of LD exists in the “American Oat Population?”

• To detect causal polymorphisms, they need to be in high LD (r2 > 0.5) with typed polymorphisms.

• If (r2 > 0.5) extends over several cM, we will need fewer markers

Page 17: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

LD in European barley

“There were in total 53 marker pairs with distance < 1 cM, of which 32 had a significant correlation (P < 0.01), while 19 pairs were not significantly correlated (P > 0.01) and thus in LE.”

N.B. r2>0.06 => P < 0.01, whereas r2>0.50 needed…

Page 18: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Linkage Disequilibrium

Page 19: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

LD in North American Oat

• O’Donoughue et al. 1994 “Relationships among North American Oat Cultivars Based on Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphisms”

• 83 cultivars (both spring and winter)• 48 probes• 205 polymorphic bands

Page 20: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Extended data from Sorrells

• 56 Probes• 239 Polymorphic bands (alleles)• 28441 allele pairs

Page 21: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Distribution of r2

1

10

100

1000

10000

100000

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1

r2

Number of Allele Pairs

NoStruct9SubPop

Page 22: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Linkage Disequilibrium

Page 23: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Extended data from Sorrells

• 56 Probes• 40 Probes with position on KxO (Wight

2003)• 21 Probes with a single position on KxO• 8 Probe pairs with single location on

same linkage group

Page 24: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

LD in North American Oat

0

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5Recombination Frequency

r2

8 Probe Pairs223 Probe Pairs

Page 25: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Questions for DArT markers

• Likely to be biased toward transcribed / untranscribed genomic regions?

• What minor allele frequencies does the discovery process allow?

• Will they mark only a single location in the hexaploid genome?

• We should probably be able to use the discovery / diversity panel for an LD study

Page 26: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

Conclusion

• I think LD-based MAS has promise– integrated discovery and use of QTL– capitalizes on phenotyping by breeders

• I think we are already setting up the DArT marker discovery process so as to get a first estimate of feasibility in oat.

Page 27: Use of breeding populations to detect and use QTL

LD decay over time