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Improved genomic prediction of clonal performance in sugarcane by exploiting non-additive genetic effects

Authors :
Karen S. Aitken
Seema Yadav
Priya Joyce
Felicity Atkin
Elizabeth M. Ross
Kai P. Voss-Fels
Xianming Wei
Yue Sun
Loan T. Nguyen
Tony Cavallaro
Emily Deomano
Ben J. Hayes
Source :
TAG. Theoretical and Applied Genetics. Theoretische Und Angewandte Genetik
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2021.

Abstract

Key message Non-additive genetic effects seem to play a substantial role in the expression of complex traits in sugarcane. Including non-additive effects in genomic prediction models significantly improves the prediction accuracy of clonal performance. Abstract In the recent decade, genetic progress has been slow in sugarcane. One reason might be that non-additive genetic effects contribute substantially to complex traits. Dense marker information provides the opportunity to exploit non-additive effects in genomic prediction. In this study, a series of genomic best linear unbiased prediction (GBLUP) models that account for additive and non-additive effects were assessed to improve the accuracy of clonal prediction. The reproducible kernel Hilbert space model, which captures non-additive genetic effects, was also tested. The models were compared using 3,006 genotyped elite clones measured for cane per hectare (TCH), commercial cane sugar (CCS), and Fibre content. Three forward prediction scenarios were considered to investigate the robustness of genomic prediction. By using a pseudo-diploid parameterization, we found significant non-additive effects that accounted for almost two-thirds of the total genetic variance for TCH. Average heterozygosity also had a major impact on TCH, indicating that directional dominance may be an important source of phenotypic variation for this trait. The extended-GBLUP model improved the prediction accuracies by at least 17% for TCH, but no improvement was observed for CCS and Fibre. Our results imply that non-additive genetic variance is important for complex traits in sugarcane, although further work is required to better understand the variance component partitioning in a highly polyploid context. Genomics-based breeding will likely benefit from exploiting non-additive genetic effects, especially in designing crossing schemes. These findings can help to improve clonal prediction, enabling a more accurate identification of variety candidates for the sugarcane industry.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14322242 and 00405752
Volume :
134
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
TAG. Theoretical and Applied Genetics. Theoretische Und Angewandte Genetik
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4794967a20309d7c0f7aa09bd1f87ed0