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Genetic Properties of the Maize Nested Association Mapping Population
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26
References
2009
Year
Plant GeneticsMaize LinesGeneticsGenomicsPlant GenomicsGenome-wide Association StudyGenotype-phenotype AssociationMolecular EcologyStatistical GeneticsAgricultural GeneticsMolecular BreedingGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsPlant BreedingBiologyGenetic PropertiesNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyMaize Genetic DiversityMedicineSegregation Distortion
Maize genetic diversity has been used to understand the molecular basis of phenotypic variation and to improve agricultural efficiency and sustainability. We crossed 25 diverse inbred maize lines to the B73 reference line, capturing a total of 136,000 recombination events. Families showed variable recombination frequencies driven by local cis variation, with many minor single‑locus effects but little two‑locus linkage disequilibrium or segregation distortion, and excess residual heterozygosity in pericentromeric regions indicates reduced selection efficiency there, suggesting these regions may disproportionately contribute to heterosis.
Maize genetic diversity has been used to understand the molecular basis of phenotypic variation and to improve agricultural efficiency and sustainability. We crossed 25 diverse inbred maize lines to the B73 reference line, capturing a total of 136,000 recombination events. Variation for recombination frequencies was observed among families, influenced by local (cis) genetic variation. We identified evidence for numerous minor single-locus effects but little two-locus linkage disequilibrium or segregation distortion, which indicated a limited role for genes with large effects and epistatic interactions on fitness. We observed excess residual heterozygosity in pericentromeric regions, which suggested that selection in inbred lines has been less efficient in these regions because of reduced recombination frequency. This implies that pericentromeric regions may contribute disproportionally to heterosis.
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