Browse Articles

Article|04 Oct 2017|OPEN
Interval mapping for red/green skin color in Asian pears using a modified QTL-seq method
Huabai Xue1,2 , Ting Shi1 , Fangfang Wang2 , Huangkai Zhou3 , Jian Yang2 , Long Wang2 , Suke Wang2 , Yanli Su2 , Zhen Zhang1 and Yushan Qiao1 , , Xiugen Li,2 ,
1College of Horticulture, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing 210095, China
2Zhengzhou Fruit Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (CAAS), Key Laboratory of Fruit Breeding Technology of Ministry of Agriculture, Zhengzhou 450009, China
3Guangzhou Gene Denovo Biotechnology Co. Ltd, Guangzhou 510006, China
*Corresponding author. E-mail: qiaoyushan@njau.edu.cn,lixiugen@caas.cn

Horticulture Research 4,
Article number: 53 (2017)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/hortres.2017.53
Views: 959

Received: 25 Apr 2017
Revised: 17 Aug 2017
Accepted: 21 Aug 2017
Published online: 04 Oct 2017

Abstract

Pears with red skin are attractive to consumers and provide additional health benefits. Identification of the gene(s) responsible for skin coloration can benefit cultivar selection and breeding. The use of QTL-seq, a bulked segregant analysis method, can be problematic when heterozygous parents are involved. The present study modified the QTL-seq method by introducing a |Δ(SNP-index)| parameter to improve the accuracy of mapping the red skin trait in a group of highly heterozygous Asian pears. The analyses were based on mixed DNA pools composed of 28 red-skinned and 27 green-skinned pear lines derived from a cross between the ‘Mantianhong’ and ‘Hongxiangsu’ red-skinned cultivars. The ‘Dangshansuli’ cultivar genome was used as reference for sequence alignment. An average single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) index was calculated using a sliding window approach (200-kb windows, 20-kb increments). Nine scaffolds within the candidate QTL interval were in the fifth linkage group from 111.9 to 177.1 cM. There was a significant linkage between the insertions/deletions and simple sequence repeat markers designed from the candidate intervals and the red/green skin (R/G) locus, which was in a 582.5-kb candidate interval that contained 81 predicted protein-coding gene models and was composed of two subintervals at the bottom of the fifth chromosome. The ZFRI 130-16, In2130-12 and In2130-16 markers located near the R/G locus could potentially be used to identify the red skin trait in Asian pear populations. This study provides new insights into the genetics controlling the red skin phenotype in this fruit.