Expanding Maize Genetic Resources with Predomestication Alleles: Maize–Teosinte Introgression Populations

Zhengbin Liu(University of Missouri), Jason P. Cook(University of Missouri), S. Melia-Hancock(University of Missouri), Katherine E. Guill(University of Missouri), Christopher A. Bottoms(University of Missouri), A.R. Garcia(University of Missouri), Oliver J. Ott(Cornell University), Rebecca Nelson(Cornell University), Jill R. Recker(North Carolina State University), Peter Balint‐Kurti(North Carolina State University), Sara J. Larsson(Cornell University), Nicholas Lepak(University of Missouri), Edward S. Buckler(Cornell University), Loren Trimble(University of Wisconsin–Madison), William F. Tracy(University of Wisconsin–Madison), Michael D. McMullen(University of Missouri), Sherry Flint-García(University of Missouri)
The Plant Genome
December 3, 2015
Cited by 68Open Access
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Abstract

Teosinte ( subsp. H. H. Iltis & Doebley) has greater genetic diversity than maize inbreds and landraces ( subsp. ). There are, however, limited genetic resources to efficiently evaluate and tap this diversity. To broaden resources for genetic diversity studies in maize, we developed and evaluated 928 near-isogenic introgression lines (NILs) from 10 teosinte accessions in the B73 background. Joint linkage analysis of the 10 introgression populations identified several large-effect quantitative trait loci (QTL) for days to anthesis (DTA), kernel row number (KRN), and 50-kernel weight (Wt50k). Our results confirm prior reports of kernel domestication loci and identify previously uncharacterized QTL with a range of allelic effects enabling future research into the genetic basis of these traits. Additionally, we used a targeted set of NILs to validate the effects of a KRN QTL located on chromosome 2. These introgression populations offer novel tools for QTL discovery and validation as well as a platform for initiating fine mapping.


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