An Ultra-High-Density, Transcript-Based, Genetic Map of Lettuce

María José Truco(University of California, Davis), Hamid Ashrafi(University of California, Davis), Alexander Kozik(University of California, Davis), Hans van Leeuwen(University of California, Davis), John Bowers(University of Georgia), S. Reyes Chin Wo(University of California, Davis), Kevin Stoffel(University of California, Davis), Huaqin Xu(University of California, Davis), Theresa Hill(University of California, Davis), Allen Van Deynze(University of California, Davis), Richard W. Michelmore(University of California, Davis)
G3 Genes Genomes Genetics
March 28, 2013
Cited by 99Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract We have generated an ultra-high-density genetic map for lettuce, an economically important member of the Compositae, consisting of 12,842 unigenes (13,943 markers) mapped in 3696 genetic bins distributed over nine chromosomal linkage groups. Genomic DNA was hybridized to a custom Affymetrix oligonucleotide array containing 6.4 million features representing 35,628 unigenes of Lactuca spp. Segregation of single-position polymorphisms was analyzed using 213 F7:8 recombinant inbred lines that had been generated by crossing cultivated Lactuca sativa cv. Salinas and L. serriola acc. US96UC23, the wild progenitor species of L. sativa. The high level of replication of each allele in the recombinant inbred lines was exploited to identify single-position polymorphisms that were assigned to parental haplotypes. Marker information has been made available using GBrowse to facilitate access to the map. This map has been anchored to the previously published integrated map of lettuce providing candidate genes for multiple phenotypes. The high density of markers achieved in this ultradense map allowed syntenic studies between lettuce and Vitis vinifera as well as other plant species.


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