Large-scale deployment of a rice 6 K SNP array for genetics and breeding applications

Abstract Background Fixed arrays of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers have advantages over reduced representation sequencing in their ease of data analysis, consistently higher call rates, and rapid turnaround times. A 6 K SNP array represents a cost-benefit “sweet spot” for routine genet...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Michael J. Thomson, Namrata Singh, Maria S. Dwiyanti, Diane R. Wang, Mark H. Wright, Francisco Agosto Perez, Genevieve DeClerck, Joong Hyoun Chin, Geraldine A. Malitic-Layaoen, Venice Margarette Juanillas, Christine J. Dilla-Ermita, Ramil Mauleon, Tobias Kretzschmar, Susan R. McCouch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2017-08-01
Series:Rice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12284-017-0181-2
id doaj-c4a700c6625644c2ad92632a99ed0f4d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c4a700c6625644c2ad92632a99ed0f4d2020-11-24T21:32:39ZengSpringerOpenRice1939-84251939-84332017-08-0110111310.1186/s12284-017-0181-2Large-scale deployment of a rice 6 K SNP array for genetics and breeding applicationsMichael J. Thomson0Namrata Singh1Maria S. Dwiyanti2Diane R. Wang3Mark H. Wright4Francisco Agosto Perez5Genevieve DeClerck6Joong Hyoun Chin7Geraldine A. Malitic-Layaoen8Venice Margarette Juanillas9Christine J. Dilla-Ermita10Ramil Mauleon11Tobias Kretzschmar12Susan R. McCouch13Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, Texas A&M UniversitySchool of Integrative Plant Sciences, Plant Breeding and Genetics Section, Cornell UniversityInternational Rice Research InstituteSchool of Integrative Plant Sciences, Plant Breeding and Genetics Section, Cornell UniversitySchool of Integrative Plant Sciences, Plant Breeding and Genetics Section, Cornell UniversitySchool of Integrative Plant Sciences, Plant Breeding and Genetics Section, Cornell UniversitySchool of Integrative Plant Sciences, Plant Breeding and Genetics Section, Cornell UniversityInternational Rice Research InstituteInternational Rice Research InstituteInternational Rice Research InstituteInternational Rice Research InstituteInternational Rice Research InstituteInternational Rice Research InstituteSchool of Integrative Plant Sciences, Plant Breeding and Genetics Section, Cornell UniversityAbstract Background Fixed arrays of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers have advantages over reduced representation sequencing in their ease of data analysis, consistently higher call rates, and rapid turnaround times. A 6 K SNP array represents a cost-benefit “sweet spot” for routine genetics and breeding applications in rice. Selection of informative SNPs across species and subpopulations during chip design is essential to obtain useful polymorphism rates for target germplasm groups. This paper summarizes results from large-scale deployment of an Illumina 6 K SNP array for rice. Results Design of the Illumina Infinium 6 K SNP chip for rice, referred to as the Cornell_6K_Array_Infinium_Rice (C6AIR), includes 4429 SNPs from re-sequencing data and 1571 SNP markers from previous BeadXpress 384-SNP sets, selected based on polymorphism rate and allele frequency within and between target germplasm groups. Of the 6000 attempted bead types, 5274 passed Illumina’s production quality control. The C6AIR was widely deployed at the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) for genetic diversity analysis, QTL mapping, and tracking introgressions and was intensively used at Cornell University for QTL analysis and developing libraries of interspecific chromosome segment substitution lines (CSSLs) between O. sativa and diverse accessions of O. rufipogon or O. meridionalis. Collectively, the array was used to genotype over 40,000 rice samples. A set of 4606 SNP markers was used to provide high quality data for O. sativa germplasm, while a slightly expanded set of 4940 SNPs was used for O. sativa X O. rufipogon populations. Biparental polymorphism rates were generally between 1900 and 2500 well-distributed SNP markers for indica x japonica or interspecific populations and between 1300 and 1500 markers for crosses within indica, while polymorphism rates were lower for pairwise crosses within U.S. tropical japonica germplasm. Recently, a second-generation array containing ~7000 SNP markers, referred to as the C7AIR, was designed by removing poor-performing SNPs from the C6AIR and adding markers selected to increase the utility of the array for elite tropical japonica material. Conclusions The C6AIR has been successfully used to generate rapid and high-quality genotype data for diverse genetics and breeding applications in rice, and provides the basis for an optimized design in the C7AIR.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12284-017-0181-2Oryza sativaO. rufipogonSingle nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)High-throughput genotypingRice diversitySNP fingerprinting
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael J. Thomson
Namrata Singh
Maria S. Dwiyanti
Diane R. Wang
Mark H. Wright
Francisco Agosto Perez
Genevieve DeClerck
Joong Hyoun Chin
Geraldine A. Malitic-Layaoen
Venice Margarette Juanillas
Christine J. Dilla-Ermita
Ramil Mauleon
Tobias Kretzschmar
Susan R. McCouch
spellingShingle Michael J. Thomson
Namrata Singh
Maria S. Dwiyanti
Diane R. Wang
Mark H. Wright
Francisco Agosto Perez
Genevieve DeClerck
Joong Hyoun Chin
Geraldine A. Malitic-Layaoen
Venice Margarette Juanillas
Christine J. Dilla-Ermita
Ramil Mauleon
Tobias Kretzschmar
Susan R. McCouch
Large-scale deployment of a rice 6 K SNP array for genetics and breeding applications
Rice
Oryza sativa
O. rufipogon
Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)
High-throughput genotyping
Rice diversity
SNP fingerprinting
author_facet Michael J. Thomson
Namrata Singh
Maria S. Dwiyanti
Diane R. Wang
Mark H. Wright
Francisco Agosto Perez
Genevieve DeClerck
Joong Hyoun Chin
Geraldine A. Malitic-Layaoen
Venice Margarette Juanillas
Christine J. Dilla-Ermita
Ramil Mauleon
Tobias Kretzschmar
Susan R. McCouch
author_sort Michael J. Thomson
title Large-scale deployment of a rice 6 K SNP array for genetics and breeding applications
title_short Large-scale deployment of a rice 6 K SNP array for genetics and breeding applications
title_full Large-scale deployment of a rice 6 K SNP array for genetics and breeding applications
title_fullStr Large-scale deployment of a rice 6 K SNP array for genetics and breeding applications
title_full_unstemmed Large-scale deployment of a rice 6 K SNP array for genetics and breeding applications
title_sort large-scale deployment of a rice 6 k snp array for genetics and breeding applications
publisher SpringerOpen
series Rice
issn 1939-8425
1939-8433
publishDate 2017-08-01
description Abstract Background Fixed arrays of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers have advantages over reduced representation sequencing in their ease of data analysis, consistently higher call rates, and rapid turnaround times. A 6 K SNP array represents a cost-benefit “sweet spot” for routine genetics and breeding applications in rice. Selection of informative SNPs across species and subpopulations during chip design is essential to obtain useful polymorphism rates for target germplasm groups. This paper summarizes results from large-scale deployment of an Illumina 6 K SNP array for rice. Results Design of the Illumina Infinium 6 K SNP chip for rice, referred to as the Cornell_6K_Array_Infinium_Rice (C6AIR), includes 4429 SNPs from re-sequencing data and 1571 SNP markers from previous BeadXpress 384-SNP sets, selected based on polymorphism rate and allele frequency within and between target germplasm groups. Of the 6000 attempted bead types, 5274 passed Illumina’s production quality control. The C6AIR was widely deployed at the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) for genetic diversity analysis, QTL mapping, and tracking introgressions and was intensively used at Cornell University for QTL analysis and developing libraries of interspecific chromosome segment substitution lines (CSSLs) between O. sativa and diverse accessions of O. rufipogon or O. meridionalis. Collectively, the array was used to genotype over 40,000 rice samples. A set of 4606 SNP markers was used to provide high quality data for O. sativa germplasm, while a slightly expanded set of 4940 SNPs was used for O. sativa X O. rufipogon populations. Biparental polymorphism rates were generally between 1900 and 2500 well-distributed SNP markers for indica x japonica or interspecific populations and between 1300 and 1500 markers for crosses within indica, while polymorphism rates were lower for pairwise crosses within U.S. tropical japonica germplasm. Recently, a second-generation array containing ~7000 SNP markers, referred to as the C7AIR, was designed by removing poor-performing SNPs from the C6AIR and adding markers selected to increase the utility of the array for elite tropical japonica material. Conclusions The C6AIR has been successfully used to generate rapid and high-quality genotype data for diverse genetics and breeding applications in rice, and provides the basis for an optimized design in the C7AIR.
topic Oryza sativa
O. rufipogon
Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)
High-throughput genotyping
Rice diversity
SNP fingerprinting
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12284-017-0181-2
work_keys_str_mv AT michaeljthomson largescaledeploymentofarice6ksnparrayforgeneticsandbreedingapplications
AT namratasingh largescaledeploymentofarice6ksnparrayforgeneticsandbreedingapplications
AT mariasdwiyanti largescaledeploymentofarice6ksnparrayforgeneticsandbreedingapplications
AT dianerwang largescaledeploymentofarice6ksnparrayforgeneticsandbreedingapplications
AT markhwright largescaledeploymentofarice6ksnparrayforgeneticsandbreedingapplications
AT franciscoagostoperez largescaledeploymentofarice6ksnparrayforgeneticsandbreedingapplications
AT genevievedeclerck largescaledeploymentofarice6ksnparrayforgeneticsandbreedingapplications
AT joonghyounchin largescaledeploymentofarice6ksnparrayforgeneticsandbreedingapplications
AT geraldineamaliticlayaoen largescaledeploymentofarice6ksnparrayforgeneticsandbreedingapplications
AT venicemargarettejuanillas largescaledeploymentofarice6ksnparrayforgeneticsandbreedingapplications
AT christinejdillaermita largescaledeploymentofarice6ksnparrayforgeneticsandbreedingapplications
AT ramilmauleon largescaledeploymentofarice6ksnparrayforgeneticsandbreedingapplications
AT tobiaskretzschmar largescaledeploymentofarice6ksnparrayforgeneticsandbreedingapplications
AT susanrmccouch largescaledeploymentofarice6ksnparrayforgeneticsandbreedingapplications
_version_ 1725956711502577664