Accuracy and responses of genomic selection on key traits in apple breeding

Archive ouverte

Muranty, Helene | Troggio, Michela | Sadok, Inès Ben | Rifaï, Mehdi Al | Auwerkerken, Annemarie | Banchi, Elisa | Velasco, Riccardo | Stevanato, Piergiorgio | van de Weg, W Eric | Di Guardo, Mario | Kumar, Satish | Laurens, Francois | Bink, Marco

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. The application of genomic selection in fruit tree crops is expected to enhance breeding efficiency by increasing prediction accuracy, increasing selection intensity and decreasing generation interval. The objectives of this study were to assess the accuracy of prediction and selection response in commercial apple breeding programmes for key traits. The training population comprised 977 individuals derived from 20 pedigreed full-sib families. Historic phenotypic data were available on 10 traits related to productivity and fruit external appearance and genotypic data for 7829 SNPs obtained with an Illumina 20K SNP array. From these data, a genome-wide prediction model was built and subsequently used to calculate genomic breeding values of five application full-sib families. The application families had genotypes at 364 SNPs from a dedicated 512 SNP array, and these genotypic data were extended to the high-density level by imputation. These five families were phenotyped for 1 year and their phenotypes were compared to the predicted breeding values. Accuracy of genomic prediction across the 10 traits reached a maximum value of 0.5 and had a median value of 0.19. The accuracies were strongly affected by the phenotypic distribution and heritability of traits. In the largest family, significant selection response was observed for traits with high heritability and symmetric phenotypic distribution. Traits that showed non-significant response often had reduced and skewed phenotypic variation or low heritability. Among the five application families the accuracies were uncorrelated to the degree of relatedness to the training population. The results underline the potential of genomic prediction to accelerate breeding progress in outbred fruit tree crops that still need to overcome long generation intervals and extensive phenotyping costs.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Genomic selection in apple: a multiple years pilot study on quantitative and ordinal traits

Archive ouverte | Muranty, Helene | CCSD

Genomic selection in apple: a multiple years pilot study on quantitative and ordinal traits. 14. International Eucarpia Fruit Breeding and Genetics Symposium

Genome-wide selection in apple: A pilot study in European breeding programs

Archive ouverte | Muranty, Helene | CCSD

The tremendous increase in throughput of genotyping techniques opened appealing perspectives for genome-wide selection (GWS), which could enhance breeding efficiency by decreasing generation interval and increasing selection inten...

A high-density, multi-parental SNP genetic map on apple validates a new mapping approach for outcrossing species

Archive ouverte | Di Pierro, Erica Adele | CCSD

International audience. Quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping approaches rely on the correct ordering of molecular markers along the chromosomes, which can be obtained from genetic linkage maps or a reference genome...

Chargement des enrichissements...