4.5 Article

Identification of epistasis loci underlying rice flowering time by controlling population stratification and polygenic effect

Journal

DNA RESEARCH
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages 119-130

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/dnares/dsy043

Keywords

GWAS; epistasis analysis; population stratification; polygenic effect; rice flowering

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31571366, 31771477]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2016YFA0501704, 2018YFC0310602]
  3. Chinese Government Scholarship for foreign students, Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center for Modern Crop Production
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

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Flowering time is an important agronomic trait, attributed by multiple genes, gene-gene interactions and environmental factors. Population stratification and polygenic effects might confound genetic effects of the causal loci underlying this complex trait. We proposed a two-step approach for detecting epistasis interactions underlying rice flowering time by accounting population structure and polygenic effects. Simulation studies showed that the approach used in this study performs better than classical and PC-linear approaches in terms of powers and false discovery rates in the case of population stratification and polygenic effects. Whole genome epistasis analyses identified 589 putative genetic interactions for flowering time. Eighteen of these interactions are located within 10 kilobases of regions of known protein-protein interactions. Thirty-seven SNPs near to twenty-five genes involve in rice or/and Arabidopsis (orthologue) flowering pathway. Bioinformatics analysis showed that 66.55% pairwise genes of the identified interactions (392 out of the 589 interactions) have similarity in various genomic features. Moreover, significant numbers of detected epistatic genes have high expression in different floral tissues. Our findings highlight the importance of epistasis analysis by controlling population stratification and polygenic effect and provided novel insights into the genetic architecture of rice flowering which could assist breeding programmes.

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