Genomic Analysis and Prediction within a US Public Collaborative Winter Wheat Regional Testing Nursery

The development of inexpensive, whole-genome profiling enables a transition to allele-based breeding using genomic prediction models. These models consider alleles shared between lines to predict phenotypes and select new lines based on estimated breeding values. This approach can leverage highly un...

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Main Authors: Trevor W. Rife, Robert A. Graybosch, Jesse A. Poland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2018-11-01
Series:The Plant Genome
Online Access:https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/tpg/articles/11/3/180004
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spelling doaj-ed4f9000500440d8899783847cfd21ea2020-11-25T01:19:22ZengWileyThe Plant Genome1940-33722018-11-0111310.3835/plantgenome2018.01.0004Genomic Analysis and Prediction within a US Public Collaborative Winter Wheat Regional Testing NurseryTrevor W. RifeRobert A. GrayboschJesse A. PolandThe development of inexpensive, whole-genome profiling enables a transition to allele-based breeding using genomic prediction models. These models consider alleles shared between lines to predict phenotypes and select new lines based on estimated breeding values. This approach can leverage highly unbalanced datasets that are common to breeding programs. The Southern Regional Performance Nursery (SRPN) is a public nursery established by the USDA–ARS in 1931 to characterize performance and quality of near-release wheat ( L.) varieties from breeding programs in the US Central Plains. New entries are submitted annually and can be re-entered only once. The trial is grown at >30 locations each year and lines are evaluated for grain yield, disease resistance, and agronomic traits. Overall genetic gain is measured across years by including common check cultivars for comparison. We have generated whole-genome profiles via genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) for 939 SPRN entries dating back to 1992 to explore the potential use of the nursery as a genomic selection (GS) training population (TP). The GS prediction models across years (average = 0.33) outperformed year-to-year phenotypic correlation for yield ( = 0.27) for a majority of the years evaluated, suggesting that genomic selection has the potential to outperform low heritability selection on yield in these highly variable environments. We also examined the predictability of programs using both program-specific and whole-set TPs. Generally, the predictability of a program was similar with both approaches. These results suggest that wheat breeding programs can collaboratively leverage the immense datasets that are generated from regional testing networks.https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/tpg/articles/11/3/180004
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Trevor W. Rife
Robert A. Graybosch
Jesse A. Poland
spellingShingle Trevor W. Rife
Robert A. Graybosch
Jesse A. Poland
Genomic Analysis and Prediction within a US Public Collaborative Winter Wheat Regional Testing Nursery
The Plant Genome
author_facet Trevor W. Rife
Robert A. Graybosch
Jesse A. Poland
author_sort Trevor W. Rife
title Genomic Analysis and Prediction within a US Public Collaborative Winter Wheat Regional Testing Nursery
title_short Genomic Analysis and Prediction within a US Public Collaborative Winter Wheat Regional Testing Nursery
title_full Genomic Analysis and Prediction within a US Public Collaborative Winter Wheat Regional Testing Nursery
title_fullStr Genomic Analysis and Prediction within a US Public Collaborative Winter Wheat Regional Testing Nursery
title_full_unstemmed Genomic Analysis and Prediction within a US Public Collaborative Winter Wheat Regional Testing Nursery
title_sort genomic analysis and prediction within a us public collaborative winter wheat regional testing nursery
publisher Wiley
series The Plant Genome
issn 1940-3372
publishDate 2018-11-01
description The development of inexpensive, whole-genome profiling enables a transition to allele-based breeding using genomic prediction models. These models consider alleles shared between lines to predict phenotypes and select new lines based on estimated breeding values. This approach can leverage highly unbalanced datasets that are common to breeding programs. The Southern Regional Performance Nursery (SRPN) is a public nursery established by the USDA–ARS in 1931 to characterize performance and quality of near-release wheat ( L.) varieties from breeding programs in the US Central Plains. New entries are submitted annually and can be re-entered only once. The trial is grown at >30 locations each year and lines are evaluated for grain yield, disease resistance, and agronomic traits. Overall genetic gain is measured across years by including common check cultivars for comparison. We have generated whole-genome profiles via genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) for 939 SPRN entries dating back to 1992 to explore the potential use of the nursery as a genomic selection (GS) training population (TP). The GS prediction models across years (average = 0.33) outperformed year-to-year phenotypic correlation for yield ( = 0.27) for a majority of the years evaluated, suggesting that genomic selection has the potential to outperform low heritability selection on yield in these highly variable environments. We also examined the predictability of programs using both program-specific and whole-set TPs. Generally, the predictability of a program was similar with both approaches. These results suggest that wheat breeding programs can collaboratively leverage the immense datasets that are generated from regional testing networks.
url https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/tpg/articles/11/3/180004
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