Methods for evaluating effects of transgenes for quantitative traits

Author:

Linares Julien F.1ORCID,Coles Nathan D.2,Mo Hua2,Habben Jeffrey E.2,Humbert Sabrina2,Messina Carlos2ORCID,Tang Tom2,Cooper Mark3ORCID,Gho Carla4,Carrasco Ricardo5,Carter Javier6,Flounders Jillian Wicher1,Brummer E. Charles7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Corteva Agriscience Woodland California USA

2. Corteva Agriscience Johnston Iowa USA

3. Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation The University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland Australia

4. Jose Maria Escriva de Balaguer Vitacura Santiago Chile

5. Corteva Agriscience La Rinconada Spain

6. Corteva Agriscience XV‐Arica y Parinacota Chile

7. Plant Breeding Center University of California‐Davis Davis California USA

Abstract

AbstractTransgenes that improve quantitative traits have traditionally been evaluated in one or a few genetic backgrounds across multiple environments. However, testing across multiple genetic backgrounds can be equally important to accurately quantify the value of a transgene for breeding objectives. Creating near‐isogenic lines across a wide germplasm space is costly and time consuming, which renders it impractical during early stages of testing. In this experiment, we evaluate three approaches to sample the genetic space while concurrently testing across environments. We created both transgenic and non‐transgenic doubled haploid maize (Zea mays L.) lines, F2:3 lines, and bulk F3 families to determine if all methods resulted in similar estimation of transgene value and to identify the number of yield trial plots from each method necessary to obtain a stable estimate of the transgene value. With one exception, the three methods consistently estimated a similar effect of the transgene. We suggest that bulked F3 lines topcrossed to a tester inbred is the most effective method to estimate the value of a transgene across both genetic space and environments.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Agronomy and Crop Science

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