INVESTIGADORES
ALVAREZ PRADO Santiago
artículos
Título:
The genetic architecture of maize (Zea mays L.) kernel weight determination.
Autor/es:
SANTIAGO ALVAREZ PRADO; CÉSAR G. LÓPEZ; M. LYNN SENIOR; LUCAS BORRÁS
Revista:
G3: Genes|Genomes|Genetics
Editorial:
Genetics Society of America
Referencias:
Año: 2014 vol. 4 p. 1611 - 1621
Resumen:
Individual kernel weight is an important trait for maize yield determination. We have identified genomic regions controlling this trait by using the B73xMo17 population; however, the effect of genetic background on control of this complex trait and its physiological components is not yet known. The objective of this study was to understand how genetic background affected our previous results. Two nested stable recombinant inbred line populations (N209xMo17 and R18xMo17) were designed for this purpose. A total of 408 recombinant inbred lines were genotyped and phenotyped at two environments for kernel weight and five other traits related to kernel growth and development. All traits showed very high and significant (P , 0.001) phenotypic variability and medium-to-high heritability (0.6020.90). When N209xMo17 and R18xMo17 were analyzed separately, a total of 23 environmentally stable quantitative trait loci (QTL) and five epistatic interactionswere detected for N209xMo17. For R18xMo17, 59 environmentally stable QTL and 17 epistatic interactions were detected. A joint analysis detected 14 stable QTL regardless of the genetic background. Between 57 and 83% of detected QTL were population specific, denoting medium-to-high genetic background effects. This percentage was dependent on the trait. A meta-analysis including our previous B73xMo17 results identified five relevant genomic regions deserving further characterization. In summary, our grain filling traits weredominated by small additive QTL with several epistatic and few environmental interactions and medium-to-high genetic background effects. This study demonstrates that the number of detected QTL and additive effects for different physiologically related grain filling traits need to be understood relative to the specific germplasm.