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Genomic selection reveals hidden relatedness and increased breeding efficiency in western redcedar polycross breeding.
Gamal El-Dien, Omnia; Shalev, Tal J; Yuen, Macaire M S; Stirling, Rod; Daniels, Lori D; Breinholt, Jesse W; Neves, Leandro G; Kirst, Matias; Van der Merwe, Lise; Yanchuk, Alvin D; Ritland, Carol; Russell, John H; Bohlmann, Joerg.
Afiliación
  • Gamal El-Dien O; Michael Smith Laboratories University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Shalev TJ; Pharmacognosy Department, Faculty of Pharmacy Alexandria University Alexandria Egypt.
  • Yuen MMS; Michael Smith Laboratories University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Stirling R; Michael Smith Laboratories University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Daniels LD; FPInnovations Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Breinholt JW; Department of Forest and Conservation Sciences University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
  • Neves LG; Rapid Genomics Gainesville Florida USA.
  • Kirst M; Intermountain Healthcare Intermountain Precision Genomics St. George Utah USA.
  • Van der Merwe L; Rapid Genomics Gainesville Florida USA.
  • Yanchuk AD; School of Forest, Fisheries and Geomatic Sciences University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA.
  • Ritland C; British Columbia Ministry of Forests Lands and Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development Victoria British Columbia Canada.
  • Russell JH; British Columbia Ministry of Forests Lands and Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development Victoria British Columbia Canada.
  • Bohlmann J; Michael Smith Laboratories University of British Columbia Vancouver British Columbia Canada.
Evol Appl ; 15(8): 1291-1312, 2022 Aug.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36051463
Western redcedar (WRC) is an ecologically and economically important forest tree species characterized by low genetic diversity with high self-compatibility and high heartwood durability. Using sequence capture genotyping of target genic and non-genic regions, we genotyped 44 parent trees and 1520 offspring trees representing 26 polycross (PX) families collected from three progeny test sites using 45,378 SNPs. Trees were phenotyped for eight traits related to growth, heartwood and foliar chemistry associated with wood durability and deer browse resistance. We used the genomic realized relationship matrix for paternity assignment, maternal pedigree correction, and to estimate genetic parameters. We compared genomics-based (GBLUP) and two pedigree-based (ABLUP: polycross and reconstructed full-sib [FS] pedigrees) models. Models were extended to estimate dominance genetic effects. Pedigree reconstruction revealed significant unequal male contribution and separated the 26 PX families into 438 FS families. Traditional maternal PX pedigree analysis resulted in up to 51% overestimation in genetic gain and 44% in diversity. Genomic analysis resulted in up to 22% improvement in offspring breeding value (BV) theoretical accuracy, 35% increase in expected genetic gain for forward selection, and doubled selection intensity for backward selection. Overall, all traits showed low to moderate heritability (0.09-0.28), moderate genotype by environment interaction (type-B genetic correlation: 0.51-0.80), low to high expected genetic gain (6.01%-55%), and no significant negative genetic correlation reflecting no large trade-offs for multi-trait selection. Only three traits showed a significant dominance effect. GBLUP resulted in smaller but more accurate heritability estimates for five traits, but larger estimates for the wood traits. Comparison between all, genic-coding, genic-non-coding and intergenic SNPs showed little difference in genetic estimates. In summary, we show that GBLUP overcomes the PX limitations, successfully captures expected historical and hidden relatedness as well as linkage disequilibrium (LD), and results in increased breeding efficiency in WRC.
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Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Banco de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies Idioma: En Revista: Evol Appl Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Colección: 01-internacional Banco de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies Idioma: En Revista: Evol Appl Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Article