Bidirectional selective genotyping carried out independently for five quantitative traits within a biparental population of recombinant inbred lines of rye has revealed dramatic changes in alleles distribution in the population tails. A given allele, predominant in the lower tail, is often neutral for reversely directed selection or associates with the upper tail following divergent selection for a related trait. Such radical changes in the alleles distribution cannot be explained by differences in genotypic values within a single locus. This paper presents the theoretical model of a genetic mechanism underlying observed responses of individual loci to divergent selection. The presented model refers to the specific interactions between alleles at two loci. Its wider application in genetic analysis will open up new possibilities for testing positions of genes in the hierarchical structure of interacting loci revealed under selection pressure.
Genetic architectures of plant height, stem thickness, spike length, awn length, heading date, thousand-kernel weight, kernel length, leaf area and chlorophyll content were aligned on the DArT-based high-density map of the 541 × Ot1–3 RILs population of rye using the genes interaction assorting by divergent selection (GIABDS) method. Complex sets of QTL for particular traits contained 1–5 loci of the epistatic D class and 10–28 loci of the hypostatic, mostly R and E classes controlling traits variation through D–E or D–R types of two-loci interactions. QTL were distributed on each of the seven rye chromosomes in unique positions or as a coinciding loci for 2–8 traits. Detection of considerable numbers of the reversed (D′, E′ and R′) classes of QTL might be attributed to the transgression effects observed for most of the studied traits. First examples of E* and F QTL classes, defined in the model, are reported for awn length, leaf area, thousand-kernel weight and kernel length. The results of this study extend experimental data to 11 quantitative traits (together with pre-harvest sprouting and alpha-amylase activity) for which genetic architectures fit the model of mechanism underlying alleles distribution within tails of bi-parental populations. They are also a valuable starting point for map-based search of genes underlying detected QTL and for planning advanced marker-assisted multi-trait breeding strategies.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s13353-017-0396-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Here, QTL mapping for thousand-kernel weight carried out within a 541 × Ot1-3 population of recombinant inbred lines using high-density DArT-based map and three methods (single-marker analysis with F parametric test, marker analysis with the Kruskal-Wallis K* nonparametric test, and the recently developed analysis named genes interaction assorting by divergent selection with χ 2 test) revealed 28 QTL distributed over all seven rye chromosomes. The first two methods showed a high level of consistency in QTL detection. Each of 13 QTL revealed in the course of gene interaction assorting by divergent selection analysis coincided with those detected by the two other methods, confirming the reliability of the new approach to QTL mapping. Its unique feature of discriminating QTL classes might help in selecting positively acting QTL and alleles for marker-assisted selection. Also, interaction among seven QTL for thousand-kernel weight was analyzed using gene interaction assorting by the divergent selection method. Pairs of QTL showed a predominantly additive relationship, but epistatic and complementary types of two-loci interactions were also revealed.
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