Turbocharging introgression breeding of perennial fruit crops: a case study on apple.
Satish KumarElena HilarioCecilia Hong DengClaire MolloyPublished in: Horticulture research (2020)
The allelic diversity of primitive germplasm of fruit crops provides a useful resource for introgressing novel genes to meet consumer preferences and environmental challenges. Pre-breeding facilitates the identification of novel genetic variation in the primitive germplasm and expedite its utilisation in cultivar breeding programmes. Several generations of pre-breeding could be required to minimise linkage drag from the donor parent and to maximise the genomic content of the recipient parent. In this study we investigated the potential of genomic selection (GS) as a tool for rapid background selection of parents for the successive generation. A diverse set of 274 accessions was genotyped using random-tag genotyping-by-sequencing, and phenotyped for eight fruit quality traits. The relationship between 'own phenotypes' of 274 accessions and their general combining ability (GCA) was also examined. Trait heritability influenced the strength of correspondence between own phenotype and the GCA. The average (across eight traits) accuracy of predicting own phenotype was 0.70, and the correlations between genomic-predicted own phenotype and GCA were similar to the observed correlations. Our results suggest that genome-assisted parental selection (GAPS) is a credible alternative to phenotypic parental selection, so could help reduce the generation interval to allow faster accumulation of favourable alleles from donor and recipient parents.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- copy number
- dna methylation
- bioinformatics analysis
- gene expression
- healthcare
- risk assessment
- human health
- climate change
- mass spectrometry
- health information
- atomic force microscopy
- high throughput
- genetic diversity
- transcription factor
- quality improvement
- sensitive detection
- hiv infected
- single molecule
- neural network
- decision making