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Identification of additive, dominant, and epistatic variation conferred by key genes in cellulose biosynthesis pathway in Populus tomentosa(†)

Economically important traits in many species generally show polygenic, quantitative inheritance. The components of genetic variation (additive, dominant and epistatic effects) of these traits conferred by multiple genes in shared biological pathways remain to be defined. Here, we investigated 11 fu...

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Autores principales: Du, Qingzhang, Tian, Jiaxing, Yang, Xiaohui, Pan, Wei, Xu, Baohua, Li, Bailian, Ingvarsson, Pär K., Zhang, Deqiang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4379978/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25428896
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/dnares/dsu040
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author Du, Qingzhang
Tian, Jiaxing
Yang, Xiaohui
Pan, Wei
Xu, Baohua
Li, Bailian
Ingvarsson, Pär K.
Zhang, Deqiang
author_facet Du, Qingzhang
Tian, Jiaxing
Yang, Xiaohui
Pan, Wei
Xu, Baohua
Li, Bailian
Ingvarsson, Pär K.
Zhang, Deqiang
author_sort Du, Qingzhang
collection PubMed
description Economically important traits in many species generally show polygenic, quantitative inheritance. The components of genetic variation (additive, dominant and epistatic effects) of these traits conferred by multiple genes in shared biological pathways remain to be defined. Here, we investigated 11 full-length genes in cellulose biosynthesis, on 10 growth and wood-property traits, within a population of 460 unrelated Populus tomentosa individuals, via multi-gene association. To validate positive associations, we conducted single-marker analysis in a linkage population of 1,200 individuals. We identified 118, 121, and 43 associations (P< 0.01) corresponding to additive, dominant, and epistatic effects, respectively, with low to moderate proportions of phenotypic variance (R(2)). Epistatic interaction models uncovered a combination of three non-synonymous sites from three unique genes, representing a significant epistasis for diameter at breast height and stem volume. Single-marker analysis validated 61 associations (false discovery rate, Q ≤ 0.10), representing 38 SNPs from nine genes, and its average effect (R(2) = 3.8%) nearly 2-fold higher than that identified with multi-gene association, suggesting that multi-gene association can capture smaller individual variants. Moreover, a structural gene–gene network based on tissue-specific transcript abundances provides a better understanding of the multi-gene pathway affecting tree growth and lignocellulose biosynthesis. Our study highlights the importance of pathway-based multiple gene associations to uncover the nature of genetic variance for quantitative traits and may drive novel progress in molecular breeding.
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spelling pubmed-43799782015-04-15 Identification of additive, dominant, and epistatic variation conferred by key genes in cellulose biosynthesis pathway in Populus tomentosa(†) Du, Qingzhang Tian, Jiaxing Yang, Xiaohui Pan, Wei Xu, Baohua Li, Bailian Ingvarsson, Pär K. Zhang, Deqiang DNA Res Full Papers Economically important traits in many species generally show polygenic, quantitative inheritance. The components of genetic variation (additive, dominant and epistatic effects) of these traits conferred by multiple genes in shared biological pathways remain to be defined. Here, we investigated 11 full-length genes in cellulose biosynthesis, on 10 growth and wood-property traits, within a population of 460 unrelated Populus tomentosa individuals, via multi-gene association. To validate positive associations, we conducted single-marker analysis in a linkage population of 1,200 individuals. We identified 118, 121, and 43 associations (P< 0.01) corresponding to additive, dominant, and epistatic effects, respectively, with low to moderate proportions of phenotypic variance (R(2)). Epistatic interaction models uncovered a combination of three non-synonymous sites from three unique genes, representing a significant epistasis for diameter at breast height and stem volume. Single-marker analysis validated 61 associations (false discovery rate, Q ≤ 0.10), representing 38 SNPs from nine genes, and its average effect (R(2) = 3.8%) nearly 2-fold higher than that identified with multi-gene association, suggesting that multi-gene association can capture smaller individual variants. Moreover, a structural gene–gene network based on tissue-specific transcript abundances provides a better understanding of the multi-gene pathway affecting tree growth and lignocellulose biosynthesis. Our study highlights the importance of pathway-based multiple gene associations to uncover the nature of genetic variance for quantitative traits and may drive novel progress in molecular breeding. Oxford University Press 2015-02 2014-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4379978/ /pubmed/25428896 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/dnares/dsu040 Text en © The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Kazusa DNA Research Institute. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Full Papers
Du, Qingzhang
Tian, Jiaxing
Yang, Xiaohui
Pan, Wei
Xu, Baohua
Li, Bailian
Ingvarsson, Pär K.
Zhang, Deqiang
Identification of additive, dominant, and epistatic variation conferred by key genes in cellulose biosynthesis pathway in Populus tomentosa(†)
title Identification of additive, dominant, and epistatic variation conferred by key genes in cellulose biosynthesis pathway in Populus tomentosa(†)
title_full Identification of additive, dominant, and epistatic variation conferred by key genes in cellulose biosynthesis pathway in Populus tomentosa(†)
title_fullStr Identification of additive, dominant, and epistatic variation conferred by key genes in cellulose biosynthesis pathway in Populus tomentosa(†)
title_full_unstemmed Identification of additive, dominant, and epistatic variation conferred by key genes in cellulose biosynthesis pathway in Populus tomentosa(†)
title_short Identification of additive, dominant, and epistatic variation conferred by key genes in cellulose biosynthesis pathway in Populus tomentosa(†)
title_sort identification of additive, dominant, and epistatic variation conferred by key genes in cellulose biosynthesis pathway in populus tomentosa(†)
topic Full Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4379978/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25428896
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/dnares/dsu040
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