1. One hundred years of comparative genetic and physical mapping in cultivated oat (Avena sativa)
- Author
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Wight, Charlene P, Blake, Victoria C, Jellen, Eric N, Yao, Eric, Sen, Taner Z, and Tinker, Nicholas A
- Subjects
Agricultural ,Veterinary and Food Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Human Genome ,Genetics ,Avena ,comparative mapping ,curation ,genes ,genetic maps ,molecular markers ,oat ,quantitative trait loci ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Agronomy & Agriculture ,Agricultural ,veterinary and food sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
Context. Researchers have been accumulating information concerning the locations of genes and quantitative trait loci (QTLs) in cultivated oat (Avena sativa L.) for more than 100 years. Aims. The aim of this work was to create an inventory of genes and QTLs found in cultivated hexaploid oat and produce tools to make this resource more useful. Methods. By using the positions of perfectly matched, single nucleotide polymorphism markers, each centimorgan (cM) location along the consensus map was assigned to a location on the OT3098 v2 physical map found on the GrainGenes database website (https://wheat.pw.usda.gov/jb/?data=/ggds/oat-ot3098v2-pepsico). This information was then used to assign physical locations to the genes and QTLs in the inventory, where possible. Key results. A table comparing the major genetic maps of hexaploid oats to each other, to the 2018 oat consensus map, and to physical chromosomes was produced. Genome browser tracks aligning the consensus map regions and the locations of the genes and QTLs to OT3098 v2 were added to GrainGenes. Conclusions. Many oat genes and QTLs identified using genetic mapping could be assigned positions on physical oat chromosomes. However, many of these assigned regions are quite long, owing to the presence of large areas of reduced recombination. Specific examples of identified patterns of recombination between the genetic and physical maps and validated gene and QTL locations are discussed. Implications. These resources will assist researchers performing comparative genetic and physical mapping in oat.
- Published
- 2024