• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: Bulk segregant analysis with molecular markers and its use for improving drought resistance in maize
  • Beteiligte: Quarrie, Steve A; Lazić-Jančić, Vesna; Kovačević, Dragan; Steed, Andy; Pekić, Sofija
  • Erschienen: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1999
  • Erschienen in: Journal of Experimental Botany
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISSN: 0022-0957; 1460-2431
  • Schlagwörter: Perspectives on QTL Analysis
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  • Beschreibung: <p>The usual method to locate and compare loci regulating quantitative traits (QTLs) requires a segregating population of plants with each one genotyped with molecular markers. However, plants from such segregating populations can also be grouped according to phenotypic expression of a trait and tested for differences in allele frequency between the population bulks: bulk segregant analysis (BSA). The same probes used for making a genetic map (e.g. isozyme, RFLP, RAPD, etc) can be used for BSA. A molecular marker showing polymorphism between the parents of the population and which is closely-linked to a major QTL regulating a particular trait will mainly co-segregate with that QTL, i.e. segregate according to the phenotype if the QTL has a large effect. Thus, if plants are grouped according to expression of the trait and extreme groups tested with that polymorphic marker, the frequency of the two marker alleles present within each of the two bulks should deviate significantly from the ratio of 1 : 1 expected for most populations. As chromosomal locations of many molecular markers have now been determined in many species, the map location of closely-linked QTLs can therefore be deduced without having to genotype every individual in a segregating population. This has been used successfully with composite populations of maize to locate QTLs associated with yield under severe drought. An inbred line derived from one of the populations selected for higher drought yield has been crossed with a drought-susceptible inbred line to produce a mapping population for QTL analysis of physiological and developmental traits likely to regulate yield under drought. Future work to identify traits having QTLs with flanking markers showing significant allele frequency differences in the BSA studies will indicate those traits likely to be important in determining yield under drought.</p>
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