Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://223.31.159.10:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/531
Title: Ultra-high density intra-specific genetic linkage maps accelerate identification of functionally relevant molecular tags governing important agronomic traits in chickpea
Authors: Kujur, Alice
Upadhyaya, Hari D.
Shree, Tanima
Bajaj, Deepak
Das, Shouvik
Saxena, Maneesha S.
Badoni, Saurabh
Kumar, Vinod
Tripathi, Shailesh
Gowda, C. L. L.
Sharma, Shivali
Singh, Sube
Tyagi, Akhilesh K.
Parida, Swarup K.
Keywords: Genetic linkage study
Genomics
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Citation: Scientific Reports, 5: 9468
Abstract: We discovered 26785 and 16573 high-quality SNPs differentiating two parental genotypes of a RIL mapping population using reference desi and kabuli genome-based GBS assay. Of these, 3625 and 2177 SNPs have been integrated into eight desi and kabuli chromosomes, respectively in order to construct ultra-high density (0.20-0.37 cM) intra-specific chickpea genetic linkage maps. One of these constructed high-resolution genetic map has potential to identify 33 major genomic regions harbouring 35 robust QTLs (PVE: 17.9-39.7%) associated with three agronomic traits, which were mapped within <1 cM mean marker intervals on desi chromosomes. The extended LD (linkage disequilibrium) decay (~15 cM) in chromosomes of genetic maps have encouraged us to use a rapid integrated approach (comparative QTL mapping, QTL-region specific haplotype/LD-based trait association analysis, expression profiling and gene haplotype-based association mapping) rather than a traditional QTL map-based cloning method to narrow-down one major seed weight (SW) robust QTL region. It delineated favourable natural allelic variants and superior haplotype-containing one seed-specific candidate embryo defective gene regulating SW in chickpea. The ultra-high-resolution genetic maps, QTLs/genes and alleles/haplotypes-related genomic information generated and integrated strategy for rapid QTL/gene identification developed have potential to expedite genomics-assisted breeding applications in crop plants, including chickpea for their genetic enhancement.
Description: Accepted date: 04 March 2015
URI: http://172.16.0.77:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/531
ISSN: 2045-2322
Appears in Collections:Institutional Publications

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