Population‐level gene expression can repeatedly link genes to functions in maize
SUMMARY Transcriptome‐wide association studies (TWAS) can provide single gene resolution for candidate genes in plants, complementing genome‐wide association studies (GWAS) but efforts in plants have been met with, at best, mixed success. We generated expression data from 693 maize genotypes, measur...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Plant journal : for cell and molecular biology 2024-07, Vol.119 (2), p.844-860 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | SUMMARY
Transcriptome‐wide association studies (TWAS) can provide single gene resolution for candidate genes in plants, complementing genome‐wide association studies (GWAS) but efforts in plants have been met with, at best, mixed success. We generated expression data from 693 maize genotypes, measured in a common field experiment, sampled over a 2‐h period to minimize diurnal and environmental effects, using full‐length RNA‐seq to maximize the accurate estimation of transcript abundance. TWAS could identify roughly 10 times as many genes likely to play a role in flowering time regulation as GWAS conducted data from the same experiment. TWAS using mature leaf tissue identified known true‐positive flowering time genes known to act in the shoot apical meristem, and trait data from a new environment enabled the identification of additional flowering time genes without the need for new expression data. eQTL analysis of TWAS‐tagged genes identified at least one additional known maize flowering time gene through trans‐eQTL interactions. Collectively these results suggest the gene expression resource described here can link genes to functions across different plant phenotypes expressed in a range of tissues and scored in different experiments.
Significance Statement
Large, deep and rapidly sampled RNA‐seq data produce great TWAS results, and discovering genes known to act in other tissues and using data from other experiments suggests these data can be reused to study other traits. |
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ISSN: | 0960-7412 1365-313X 1365-313X |
DOI: | 10.1111/tpj.16801 |