QTL analysis reveals different and independent modes of inheritance for diagnostic achene characters in Microseris (Asteraceae)

2002 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​QTL analysis reveals different and independent modes of inheritance for diagnostic achene characters in Microseris (Asteraceae)​
Gailing, O.   & Bachmann, K.​ (2002) 
Organisms Diversity & Evolution2(4) pp. 277​-288​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1078/1439-6092-00041 

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Authors
Gailing, Oliver ; Bachmann, K.
Abstract
There are few reliable diagnostic morphological characters for species of the asteracean genus Microseris, and quantitative differences in the shapes of the achenes and the paleaceous pappus parts play a decisive role in species recognition. The genetic basis of species and strain differences in various characters has been studied previously, but little is known about quantitative characters of the achenes. We performed a quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis in the F2 of an interspecific cross between Microseris douglasii and M. bigelovii for achene length, achene diameter, achene shape, palea length, awn length, and achene pigmentation. Independent inheritance of the main heritable achene characters - achene length, palea length and achene pigmentation - was revealed by the detection of distinct and specific QTLs for these characters. For palea length five QTLs with about equal phenotypic effects were mapped on four different linkage groups. Achene length and achene shape (achene length / achene diameter) were determined by two different genetic systems with one major gene and two modifiers. The detection of QTLs with a polarity of the effects opposite to that in the parental strains for achene length and achene shape reveals genetic variation for a potential increase in species differences. For the highly heritable trait, achene pigmentation, the bimodal F2 distribution suggested single-factor inheritance for absence versus presence of spots, with dominance for the spotted condition. However, only relatively weak QTL effects on that trait could be detected. Additional molecular markers (RAPDs, AFLPs) have to be tested for cosegregation with that major gene. The results are discussed in the context of different theories for the evolution of morphological characters.
Issue Date
2002
Journal
Organisms Diversity & Evolution 
Organization
Fakultät für Forstwissenschaften und Waldökologie ; Büsgen-Institut ; Abteilung Forstgenetik und Forstpflanzenzüchtung 
ISSN
1439-6092
Language
English

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