Publication | Open Access
Genomic Prediction of Genotype × Environment Interaction Kernel Regression Models
182
Citations
25
References
2016
Year
GeneticsGenomic PredictionGenome-wide Association StudyGenetic AnalysisGenotype-phenotype AssociationBiostatisticsPublic HealthFlexible KernelsStatisticsGene-environment InteractionQuantitative GeneticsStatistical GeneticsCrop Growth ModelingPopulation GeneticsPlant BreedingGaussian KernelsAgricultural ModelingComputational BiologyReproducing Kernel MethodStatistical InferenceNonlinear Gaussian KernelsMedicineKernel Method
In genomic selection (GS), genotype × environment interaction (G × E) can be modeled by a marker × environment interaction (M × E). The G × E may be modeled through a linear kernel or a nonlinear (Gaussian) kernel. In this study, we propose using two nonlinear Gaussian kernels: the reproducing kernel Hilbert space with kernel averaging (RKHS KA) and the Gaussian kernel with the bandwidth estimated through an empirical Bayesian method (RKHS EB). We performed single-environment analyses and extended to account for G × E interaction (GBLUP-G × E, RKHS KA-G × E and RKHS EB-G × E) in wheat ( L.) and maize ( L.) data sets. For single-environment analyses of wheat and maize data sets, RKHS EB and RKHS KA had higher prediction accuracy than GBLUP for all environments. For the wheat data, the RKHS KA-G × E and RKHS EB-G × E models did show up to 60 to 68% superiority over the corresponding single environment for pairs of environments with positive correlations. For the wheat data set, the models with Gaussian kernels had accuracies up to 17% higher than that of GBLUP-G × E. For the maize data set, the prediction accuracy of RKHS EB-G × E and RKHS KA-G × E was, on average, 5 to 6% higher than that of GBLUP-G × E. The superiority of the Gaussian kernel models over the linear kernel is due to more flexible kernels that accounts for small, more complex marker main effects and marker-specific interaction effects.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1