The Genetic Architecture of Maize Flowering Time
Agricultural Research Service · Cornell University · +14 more institutions
Abstract
Flowering time is a complex trait that controls adaptation of plants to their local environment in the outcrossing species Zea mays (maize). We dissected variation for flowering time with a set of 5000 recombinant inbred lines (maize Nested Association Mapping population, NAM). Nearly a million plants were assayed in eight environments but showed no evidence for any single large-effect quantitative trait loci (QTLs). Instead, we identified evidence for numerous small-effect QTLs shared among families; however, allelic effects differ across founder lines. We identified no individual QTLs at which allelic effects are determined by geographic origin or large effects for epistasis or environmental interactions.…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 62.22
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 29
Authors
36- ESEdward S. BucklerCorresponding
Agricultural Research Service, Cornell University, Foreign Agricultural Service
- JBJames B. HollandCorresponding
Agricultural Research Service, North Carolina State University, Foreign Agricultural Service
- PJPeter J. Bradbury
Agricultural Research Service, Cornell University, Foreign Agricultural Service
- CBCharlotte B. Acharya
Cornell University
- PJPatrick J. Brown
Cornell University
Topics & keywords
- Outcrossing
- Epistasis
- Selfing
- Biology
- Genetic architecture
- Quantitative trait locus
- Population
- Allele
- Zero hunger