Genome-wide association mapping of agronomic and morphologic traits in highly structured populations of barley cultivars.

Minghui Wang, Ning Jiang, Tianye Jia, Lindsey Leach, J Cockram, R Waugh, L Ramsay, B Thomas, Zewei Luo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

88 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Genome-wide association study (GWAS) has become an obvious general approach for studying traits of agricultural importance in higher plants, especially crops. Here, we present a GWAS of 32 morphologic and 10 agronomic traits in a collection of 615 barley cultivars genotyped by genome-wide polymorphisms from a recently developed barley oligonucleotide pool assay. Strong population structure effect related to mixed sampling based on seasonal growth habit and ear row number is present in this barley collection. Comparison of seven statistical approaches in a genome-wide scan for significant associations with or without correction for confounding by population structure, revealed that in reducing false positive rates while maintaining statistical power, a mixed linear model solution outperforms genomic control, structured association, stepwise regression control and principal components adjustment. The present study reports significant associations for sixteen morphologic and nine agronomic traits and demonstrates the power and feasibility of applying GWAS to explore complex traits in highly structured plant samples.
Original languageEnglish
JournalTheoretical and Applied Genetics
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Sept 2011

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