Insights Into the Genetic Basis of Blueberry Fruit-Related Traits Using Diploid and Polyploid Models in a GWAS Context

Publication Overview
TitleInsights Into the Genetic Basis of Blueberry Fruit-Related Traits Using Diploid and Polyploid Models in a GWAS Context
AuthorsFerrão LF, Benevenuto J, Oliveira ID, Cellon C, Olmstead J, Kirst M, Resende Jr MF, Munoz P.
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameFrontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Volume6
Year2018
Page(s)107
CitationFerrão LF, Benevenuto J, Oliveira ID, Cellon C, Olmstead J, Kirst M, Resende Jr MF, Munoz P. Insights into the genetic basis of blueberry fruit-related traits using diploid and polyploid models in a GWAS context. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. 2018 Jul 24;6:107.

Abstract

Polyploidization is an ancient and recurrent process in plant evolution, impacting the diversification of natural populations and plant breeding strategies. Polyploidization occurs in many important crops; however, its effects on inheritance of many agronomic traits are still poorly understood compared with diploid species. Higher levels of allelic dosage or more complex interactions between alleles could affect the phenotype expression. Hence, the present study aimed to dissect the genetic basis of fruit-related traits in autotetraploid blueberries and identify candidate genes affecting phenotypic variation. We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) assuming diploid and tetraploid inheritance, encompassing distinct models of gene action (additive, general, different orders of allelic interaction, and the corresponding diploidized models). A total of 1,575 southern highbush blueberry individuals from a breeding population of 117 full-sib families were genotyped using sequence capture and next-generation sequencing, and evaluated for eight fruit-related traits. For the diploid allele calling, 77,496 SNPs were detected; while 80,591 SNPs were obtained in tetraploid, with a high degree of overlap (95%) between them. A linear mixed model that accounted for population and family structure was used for the GWAS analyses. By modeling tetraploid genotypes, we detected 15 SNPs significantly associated with five fruit-related traits. Alternatively, seven significant SNPs were detected for only two traits using diploid genotypes, with two SNPs overlapping with the tetraploid scenario. Our results showed that the importance of tetraploid models varied by trait and that the use of diploid models has hindered the detection of SNP-trait associations and, consequently, the genetic architecture of some commercially important traits in autotetraploid species. Furthermore, 14 SNPs co-localized with candidate genes, five of which lead to non-synonymous amino acid changes. The potential functional significance of these SNPs is discussed.
Features
This publication contains information about 24 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
scaffold00064_258026scaffold00064_258026genetic_marker
scaffold01404_29267scaffold01404_29267genetic_marker
scaffold01404_29284scaffold01404_29284genetic_marker
scaffold05723_761scaffold05723_761genetic_marker
scaffold00310_82023scaffold00310_82023genetic_marker
scaffold04772_1107scaffold04772_1107genetic_marker
scaffold00258_161788scaffold00258_161788genetic_marker
scaffold12980_1175scaffold12980_1175genetic_marker
CUFF.5533CUFF.5533_V_corymbosum_May2013_v1gene
Fruit sizeGWAS0000001GWAS
CUFF.39364CUFF.39364_V_corymbosum_May2013_v1gene
Fruit sizeGWAS0000002GWAS
Fruit sizeGWAS0000003GWAS
CUFF.54762CUFF.54762_V_corymbosum_May2013_v1gene
Stem scar diameterGWAS0000004GWAS
CUFF.16799CUFF.16799_V_corymbosum_May2013_v1gene
Brix (soluble solids)GWAS0000005GWAS
CUFF.53548CUFF.53548_V_corymbosum_May2013_v1gene
Brix (soluble solids)GWAS0000006GWAS
CUFF.14779CUFF.14779_V_corymbosum_May2013_v1gene
fruit pHGWAS0000007GWAS
CUFF.60704CUFF.60704_V_corymbosum_May2013_v1gene
Flower bud densityGWAS0000008GWAS
Flower bud densityGWAS0000009GWAS
Projects
This publication contains information about 1 projects:
Project NameDescription
Blueberry-Fruit_traits_ploidy-Ferrao-2018
Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
URLhttps://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2018.00107/full
DOI10.3389/fevo.2018.00107