Insertion site‐based polymorphism markers open new perspectives for genome saturation and marker‐assisted selection in wheat |
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Authors: | Etienne Paux Sébastien Faure Frédéric Choulet Delphine Roger Valérie Gauthier Jean‐Pierre Martinant Pierre Sourdille François Balfourier Marie‐Christine Le Paslier Aurélie Chauveau Mehmet Cakir Béatrice Gandon Catherine Feuillet |
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Affiliation: | 1. INRA UBP UMR 1095, Genetics, Diversity & Ecophysiology of Cereals, Clermont Ferrand, France;2. Current address: Genetics & Genomics in Cereals, BIOGEMMA, 8 rue des Frères Lumière, 63028 Clermont Ferrand cedex 2, France.;3. Limagrain Verneuil Holding, Riom cedex, France;4. Unité INRA‐EPGV UR1279, CEA, Institut de Génomique, Centre National de Génotypage, Evry cedex, France;5. School of Biological Sciences & Biotechnology, Faculty of Sustainability, Environmental and Life Sciences, Murdoch University, Murdoch, WA, Australia |
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Abstract: | In wheat, the deployment of marker‐assisted selection has long been hampered by the lack of markers compatible with high‐throughput cost‐effective genotyping techniques. Recently, insertion site‐based polymorphism (ISBP) markers have appeared as very powerful new tools for genomics and genetic studies in hexaploid wheat. To demonstrate their possible use in wheat breeding programmes, we assessed their potential to meet the five main requirements for utilization in MAS: flexible and high‐throughput detection methods, low quantity and quality of DNA required, low cost per assay, tight link to target loci and high level of polymorphism in breeding material. Toward this aim, we developed a programme, IsbpFinder, for the automated design of ISBP markers and adapted three detection methods (melting curve analysis, SNaPshot® Multiplex System and Illumina BeadArray technology) for high throughput and flexible detection of ISBP or ISBP‐derived SNP markers. We demonstrate that the high level of polymorphism of the ISBPs combined with cost‐effective genotyping methods can be used to efficiently saturate genetic maps, discriminate between elite cultivars, and design tightly linked diagnostic markers for virtually all target loci in the wheat genome. All together, our results suggest that ISBP markers have the potential to lead to a breakthrough in wheat marker‐assisted selection. |
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Keywords: | Insertion site‐based polymorphism molecular marker polymorphism mapping marker‐assisted selection wheat |
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