DocumentCode :
2283607
Title :
Simulating superior genotypes for plant height based on QTLs: Towards virtual breeding of rice
Author :
Lifeng Xu ; Weilong Ding ; Jun Zhu ; Henke, M. ; Kurth, Winfried ; Buck-Sorlin, Gerhard
Author_Institution :
Key Lab. of Visual Media Intell. Process Technol., Zhejiang Univ. of Technol., Hangzhou, China
fYear :
2012
fDate :
Oct. 31 2012-Nov. 3 2012
Firstpage :
447
Lastpage :
454
Abstract :
Crop plant researchers and agronomists have in the recent past increasingly turned to crop modeling as a promising tool for the integration and exploration of experimental data from breeding and agronomy. Set up suitably, crop modeling can then also be used to predict performance of future high-yielding cultivars, e.g. of rice, which is one of the major food crops worldwide. Questions such as “Which combination of alleles is likely to have the strongest influence on the development of the individual phenotype?” or “In which way is QTL action modified by a particular environment?” can be tackled with the help of a crop modeling approach. As a further extension of a previously established Functional-Structural Plant model (FSPM) of rice we present here simulated “virtual” reproduction of individuals using QTL information, which can contribute to providing answers to these difficult questions. In this study, we briefly describe the way QTL information has been integrated into the rice model, and sketch the algorithmic implementation of processes leading to the creation of filial genotypes from parental genotypes via simulated sexual reproduction. The phenotype value, which in this case was plant height, was determined with the rules that specify the genetic processes operating on genotypes as intrinsic properties of each individual. The mapping results from the simulated population were compared with the input values for the parental lines. It is shown that the rice model faithfully reflected the genetic properties from the parental lines with low bias, which suggests a reasonable way to integrate QTLs into the plant eco-physiological model with the predictive properties. It could in the future be used as a supporting tool in breeding practice.
Keywords :
crops; QTL information; agronomists; agronomy; crop modeling; crop plant researchers; filial genotypes; functional structural plant model; future high yielding cultivars; genetic process; major food crops worldwide; parental genotypes; parental lines; phenotype value; plant ecophysiological model; plant height; rice model; rice virtual breeding; simulated population; simulated sexual reproduction; simulated virtual reproduction; superior genotypes; QTL; eco-physiological model; quantitative genetics; rice; virtual breeding;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Plant Growth Modeling, Simulation, Visualization and Applications (PMA), 2012 IEEE Fourth International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Shanghai
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-0067-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PMA.2012.6524871
Filename :
6524871
Link To Document :
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