Targeting between-species effects for improvement in synthetic hybrid populations derived from outcrossing parental tree species may be one way to increase the efficacy and predictability of hybrid breeding. We present a comparative analysis of the quantitative trait loci (QTL) which resolved between from within-species effects for adventitious rooting in two populations of hybrids between Pinus elliottii and P. caribaea, an outbred F1 (n=287) and an inbred-like F2 family (n=357). Most small to moderate effect QTL (each explaining 2–5% of phenotypic variation, PV) were congruent (3 out of 4 QTL in each family) and therefore considered within-species effects as they segregated in both families. A single large effect QTL (40% PV) was detected uniquely in the F2 family and assumed to be due to a between-species effect, resulting from a genetic locus with contrasting alleles in each parental species. Oligogenic as opposed to polygenic architecture was supported in both families (60% and 20% PV explained by 4 QTL in the F2 and F1 respectively). The importance of adventitious rooting for adaptation to survive water-logged environments was thought in part to explain oligogenic architecture of what is believed to be a complex trait controlled by many hundreds of genes.
Journal article
Congruence in QTL for adventitious rooting in Pinus elliottii x P. caribaea hybrids resolves between and within-species effects
Molecular Breeding, Vol.18(1), pp.11-28
2006
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- Congruence in QTL for adventitious rooting in Pinus elliottii x P. caribaea hybrids resolves between and within-species effects
- Creators
- Mervyn Shepherd (Author) - Southern Cross UniversityShaowei Huang (Author) - South China Agricultural UniversityPeter Eggler (Author) - Southern Cross UniversityMichael Cross (Author) - Southern Cross UniversityGlenn Dale (Author) - Tree Crop Technologies Pty LtdMark J Dieters (Author)Robert J Henry (Author) - Southern Cross University
- Publication Details
- Molecular Breeding, Vol.18(1), pp.11-28
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Identifiers
- 1090; 991012821913202368
- Academic Unit
- Science; Southern Cross Plant Science; Faculty of Science and Engineering
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article