Haplotyping the Vitis collinear core genome with rhAmpSeq improves marker transferability in a diverse genus
Transferable DNA markers are essential for breeding and genetics. Grapevine ( Vitis ) breeders utilize disease resistance alleles from congeneric species ~20 million years divergent, but existing Vitis marker platforms have cross-species transfer rates as low as 2%. Here, we apply a marker strategy...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2020-01, Vol.11 (1), p.413-413, Article 413 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Transferable DNA markers are essential for breeding and genetics. Grapevine (
Vitis
) breeders utilize disease resistance alleles from congeneric species ~20 million years divergent, but existing
Vitis
marker platforms have cross-species transfer rates as low as 2%. Here, we apply a marker strategy targeting the inferred
Vitis
core genome. Incorporating seven linked-read de novo assemblies and three existing assemblies, the
Vitis
collinear core genome is estimated to converge at 39.8 Mb (8.67% of the genome). Adding shotgun genome sequences from 40 accessions enables identification of conserved core PCR primer binding sites flanking polymorphic haplotypes with high information content. From these target regions, we develop 2,000 rhAmpSeq markers as a PCR multiplex and validate the panel in four biparental populations spanning the diversity of the
Vitis
genus, showing transferability increases to 91.9%. This marker development strategy should be widely applicable for genetic studies in many taxa, particularly those ~20 million years divergent.
Trait introgression requires universal markers, but cross-species transferability of current SNP markers can be as low as 2%. Here, the authors use an AmpSeq haplotype strategy targeting the collinear core genome for marker development and show transferability increases to 91.4% in the
Vitis
genus. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-019-14280-1 |