4.7 Article

The use of shared haplotype length information for pedigree reconstruction in asexually propagated outbreeding crops, demonstrated for apple and sweet cherry

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HORTICULTURE RESEARCH
卷 8, 期 1, 页码 -

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NANJING AGRICULTURAL UNIV
DOI: 10.1038/s41438-021-00637-5

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资金

  1. Niedersachsisches Ministerium fur Wissenschaft und Kultur
  2. USDA NIFA Specialty Crop Research Initiative [2009-51181-05808, 2014-51181-22378]
  3. USDA NIFA Hatch project [1014919]
  4. State Agricultural Experiment Station University of Minnesota Project MIN-21-040
  5. EU [265582]

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Pedigree information is crucial in breeding programs, but many individuals have unknown pedigrees. This study developed a method using shared haplotype lengths to support complex pedigree reconstruction, which is valuable for identifying unknown relationships.
Pedigree information is of fundamental importance in breeding programs and related genetics efforts. However, many individuals have unknown pedigrees. While methods to identify and confirm direct parent-offspring relationships are routine, those for other types of close relationships have yet to be effectively and widely implemented with plants, due to complications such as asexual propagation and extensive inbreeding. The objective of this study was to develop and demonstrate methods that support complex pedigree reconstruction via the total length of identical by state haplotypes (referred to in this study as summed potential lengths of shared haplotypes, SPLoSH). A custom Python script, HapShared, was developed to generate SPLoSH data in apple and sweet cherry. HapShared was used to establish empirical distributions of SPLoSH data for known relationships in these crops. These distributions were then used to estimate previously unknown relationships. Case studies in each crop demonstrated various pedigree reconstruction scenarios using SPLoSH data. For cherry, a full-sib relationship was deduced for 'Emperor Francis, and 'Schmidt', a half-sib relationship for 'Van' and 'Windsor', and the paternal grandparents of 'Stella' were confirmed. For apple, 29 cultivars were found to share an unknown parent, the pedigree of the unknown parent of 'Cox's Pomona' was reconstructed, and 'Fameuse' was deduced to be a likely grandparent of 'McIntosh'. Key genetic resources that enabled this empirical study were large genome-wide SNP array datasets, integrated genetic maps, and previously identified pedigree relationships. Crops with similar resources are also expected to benefit from using HapShared for empowering pedigree reconstruction.

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