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Molecular markers and selection for complex traits in plants : learning from the last 20 years

By: Material type: ArticleArticleLanguage: English Publication details: Madison (USA) : CSSA : Wiley, 2008.ISSN:
  • 0011-183X
  • 1435-0653 (Online)
Subject(s): In: Crop Science v. 48, no. 5, p. 1649-1664Summary: In the mid‐1980s, the development of abundant molecular markers, appropriate statistical procedures, and user‐friendly computer software that implemented these statistical procedures permitted the detection of molecular markers associated with quantitative trait loci (QTL) for complex traits. Marker‐assisted selection was then proposed as a means of exploiting markers linked to QTL to develop improved cultivars. But while thousands of marker‐trait associations have been reported for many traits in different plant species, far fewer examples of successfully exploiting mapped QTL have been reported in the literature. Key lessons learned from applying markers in plant breeding include the following: (i) the purpose of detecting QTL should be clearly defined before embarking on QTL mapping; (ii) procedures for marker‐based selection depend on the number of QTL; (iii) estimates of QTL effects for complex traits are often inconsistent; and (iv) gain per unit cost and time rather than gain per cycle should be considered. Future applications for complex traits will likely focus on predictive methodologies for marker‐based selection before phenotyping and for marker‐based selection without QTL mapping. These applications will take advantage of cheaper costs of genotyping than of phenotyping.
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In the mid‐1980s, the development of abundant molecular markers, appropriate statistical procedures, and user‐friendly computer software that implemented these statistical procedures permitted the detection of molecular markers associated with quantitative trait loci (QTL) for complex traits. Marker‐assisted selection was then proposed as a means of exploiting markers linked to QTL to develop improved cultivars. But while thousands of marker‐trait associations have been reported for many traits in different plant species, far fewer examples of successfully exploiting mapped QTL have been reported in the literature. Key lessons learned from applying markers in plant breeding include the following: (i) the purpose of detecting QTL should be clearly defined before embarking on QTL mapping; (ii) procedures for marker‐based selection depend on the number of QTL; (iii) estimates of QTL effects for complex traits are often inconsistent; and (iv) gain per unit cost and time rather than gain per cycle should be considered. Future applications for complex traits will likely focus on predictive methodologies for marker‐based selection before phenotyping and for marker‐based selection without QTL mapping. These applications will take advantage of cheaper costs of genotyping than of phenotyping.

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