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- Title
The use of general and specific combining abilities in a context of gene expression relevant to plant breeding.
- Authors
Vuylsteke, Marnik; Van Eeuwijk, Fred
- Abstract
Many common traits are believed to be a composite reflection of multiple genetic and environmental factors. Recent advances suggest that subtle variations in the regulation of gene expression may contribute to quantitative traits. The nature of sequence variation affecting the regulation of gene expression either in cis (that is, affecting the expression of only one of the two alleles in a heterozygous diploid) or in trans (that is, affecting the expression of both alleles in a heterozygous diploid) is a key and usually unknown feature for the breeders. If the change in expression acts entirely in cis, then the structural gene can be treated as a candidate gene and a potential target for marker-assisted selection. Therefore, gene surveys for cis-regulatory variation are a first step in identifying potential targets for marker-assisted breeding. Here, we discuss in detail the “genome-wide analysis of allele-specific expression differences” (GASED) approach. The GASED approach was developed to screen for cis-regulatory variation on a genome-wide scale. In GASED, mRNA abundance is treated as if it were a quantitative phenotypic response variable, whose genetic between-F1 hybrid variance is partitioned into additive and non-additive components. In plant breeding, this partitioning of the genetic variance is well known in the context of estimation of general and specific combining abilities for diallel crossing schemes. We demonstrate the GASED method using Arabidopsis thaliana data. The method can be used to screen for cis-regulatory variation in any crop species for which diallel crossing schemes are appropriate and genomic tools are available.
- Subjects
GENE expression; GENETICS; BREEDING; PLANT breeding; RNA
- Publication
Euphytica, 2008, Vol 161, Issue 1/2, p115
- ISSN
0014-2336
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10681-007-9452-0