Author:
ZENG ZHAO-BANG,KAO CHEN-HUNG,BASTEN CHRISTOPHER J.
Abstract
Understanding and estimating the structure and parameters associated with the genetic architecture
of quantitative traits is a major research focus in quantitative genetics. With the availability of a
well-saturated genetic map of molecular markers, it is possible to identify a major part of the
structure of the genetic architecture of quantitative traits and to estimate the associated
parameters. Multiple interval mapping, which was recently proposed for simultaneously mapping
multiple quantitative trait loci (QTL), is well suited to the identification and estimation of the
genetic architecture parameters, including the number, genomic positions, effects and interactions
of significant QTL and their contribution to the genetic variance. With multiple traits and multiple
environments involved in a QTL mapping experiment, pleiotropic effects and QTL by environment
interactions can also be estimated. We review the method and discuss issues associated with
multiple interval mapping, such as likelihood analysis, model selection, stopping rules and
parameter estimation. The potential power and advantages of the method for mapping multiple
QTL and estimating the genetic architecture are discussed. We also point out potential problems
and difficulties in resolving the details of the genetic architecture as well as other areas that require
further investigation. One application of the analysis is to improve genome-wide marker-assisted
selection, particularly when the information about epistasis is used for selection with mating.
Subject
Genetics,General Medicine
Cited by
251 articles.
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