Authors
Jason A Peiffer, Maria C Romay, Michael A Gore, Sherry A Flint-Garcia, Zhiwu Zhang, Mark J Millard, Candice AC Gardner, Michael D McMullen, James B Holland, Peter J Bradbury, Edward S Buckler
Publication date
2014/4/1
Journal
Genetics
Volume
196
Issue
4
Pages
1337-1356
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Height is one of the most heritable and easily measured traits in maize (Zea mays L.). Given a pedigree or estimates of the genomic identity-by-state among related plants, height is also accurately predictable. But, mapping alleles explaining natural variation in maize height remains a formidable challenge. To address this challenge, we measured the plant height, ear height, flowering time, and node counts of plants grown in >64,500 plots across 13 environments. These plots contained >7300 inbreds representing most publically available maize inbreds in the United States and families of the maize Nested Association Mapping (NAM) panel. Joint-linkage mapping of quantitative trait loci (QTL), fine mapping in near isogenic lines (NILs), genome-wide association studies (GWAS), and genomic best linear unbiased prediction (GBLUP) were performed. The heritability of maize height was estimated to be >90 …
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Scholar articles
JA Peiffer, MC Romay, MA Gore, SA Flint-Garcia… - Genetics, 2014