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marker-assisted selection in wheat - ictsd

marker-assisted selection in wheat - ictsd

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346Marker-<strong>assisted</strong> <strong>selection</strong> – Current status and future perspectives <strong>in</strong> crops, livestock, forestry and fishF<strong>in</strong>e mapp<strong>in</strong>g methods attempt to overcomethis problem by quantify<strong>in</strong>g the gameticphase or l<strong>in</strong>kage disequilibrium (LD)present <strong>in</strong> an outbred population, i.e. acrossfamilies. This method makes use of thenumber of generations as the appearanceof a mutation and can produce extremelyprecise estimates of the QTL position(Pérez-Enciso et al., 2003). The rationalebeh<strong>in</strong>d us<strong>in</strong>g LD for mapp<strong>in</strong>g QTL is thatwhen the population size is rather small,founders of the population would haveonly a limited number of haplotypes, andwith very tightly l<strong>in</strong>ked loci there may notbe sufficient time for recomb<strong>in</strong>ation tobreak up the association between <strong>marker</strong>sand the mutation affect<strong>in</strong>g the quantitativetrait.LD mapp<strong>in</strong>g is carried out by calculat<strong>in</strong>gthe probabilities that haplotypes shared by<strong>in</strong>dividuals are identical by descent from acommon ancestor conditional on <strong>marker</strong>data (assum<strong>in</strong>g t generations as the commonancestor and a certa<strong>in</strong> N e ; Meuwissen andGoddard, 2001). The LD <strong>in</strong> the populationdepends on a number of populationparameters such as the degree of admixtureor stratification <strong>in</strong> the population andthe actual level of association between thecausal mutation and the polymorphisms.The correct determ<strong>in</strong>ation of phases andof genotypes at the QTL is required forf<strong>in</strong>e mapp<strong>in</strong>g purposes (Meuwissen andGoddard, 2001; Pérez-Enciso, 2003). Forthese reasons, a pure LD analysis is likelyto result <strong>in</strong> a large number of false positives,i.e. falsely <strong>in</strong>ferr<strong>in</strong>g association when thereis no l<strong>in</strong>kage.Methods that <strong>in</strong>corporate the l<strong>in</strong>kage<strong>in</strong>formation (with<strong>in</strong> families) and LDjo<strong>in</strong>tly are preferred, because the likelihoodof spurious association (i.e. LD withoutl<strong>in</strong>kage) dim<strong>in</strong>ishes, mak<strong>in</strong>g much betteruse of the whole data set (Meuwissen andGoddard, 2001, 2004; Pérez-Enciso, 2004).All of these methods, however, require agreat deal of genotyp<strong>in</strong>g of tightly l<strong>in</strong>ked<strong>marker</strong>s such as SNPs, which currently arenot widely available for f<strong>in</strong>e mapp<strong>in</strong>g <strong>in</strong>aquaculture species.Us<strong>in</strong>g f<strong>in</strong>e mapp<strong>in</strong>g techniques, the confidence<strong>in</strong>terval for QTL position can bereduced considerably. However, to developa direct test for a favourable polymorphismrequires use of comparative mapp<strong>in</strong>gapproaches with model species, such aszebrafish or fugu, to select the candidategenes that most likely affect the trait of<strong>in</strong>terest. Otherwise, enrichment of <strong>marker</strong>s<strong>in</strong> a specific region of the genome (tonarrow further the most likely position ofthe polymorphism) follow<strong>in</strong>g sequenc<strong>in</strong>gis needed to compare sequences between<strong>in</strong>dividuals that show different phenotypesor alternative QTL alleles.Candidate gene analysisIt is tempt<strong>in</strong>g to <strong>in</strong>voke variation at geneswith a known role <strong>in</strong> the physiology underly<strong>in</strong>ga complex trait such as growth toexpla<strong>in</strong> phenotypic variability for the trait.These genes can be searched for polymorphisms(e.g. SNPs) and the variants thentested to determ<strong>in</strong>e whether they are correlatedwith the expression of the quantitativetrait. This approach requires knowledgeof the biology of the species, biochemicalpathways and gene sequences <strong>in</strong> order totarget variation at those specific genes. Inaquaculture, most of this <strong>in</strong>formation is currentlylack<strong>in</strong>g, but it is expected that moregenes will be <strong>in</strong>corporated <strong>in</strong> databases <strong>in</strong>the near future. The possibility exists to utilizedata from highly studied model species,such as zebrafish or ra<strong>in</strong>bow trout, <strong>in</strong> comparativebio<strong>in</strong>formatic approaches.To date, this strategy has not proven particularlysuccessful for expla<strong>in</strong><strong>in</strong>g genetic

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