Prospects and challenges of applied genomic selection-a new paradigm in breeding for grain yield in bread wheat

Genomic selection (GS) has been promising for increasing genetic gains in several species. Therefore, we evaluated the potential integration of GS for grain yield (GY) in bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) in CIMMYT's elite yield trial nurseries. We observed that the genomic prediction accuracies within nurseries (0.44 and 0.35) were substantially higher than across-nursery accuracies (0.15 and 0.05) for GY evaluated in the bed and flat planting systems, respectively. The accuracies from using only a subset of 251 genotyping-by-sequencing markers were comparable to the accuracies using all 2038 markers. We also used the item-based collaborative filtering approach for incorporating other related traits in predicting GY and observed that it outperformed genomic predictions across nurseries, but was less predictive when trait correlations with GY were low. Furthermore, we compared GS and phenotypic selections (PS) and observed that at a selection intensity of 0.5, GS could select a maximum of 70.9 and 61.5% of the top lines and discard 71.5 and 60.5% of the poor lines selected or discarded by PS within and across nurseries, respectively. Comparisons of GS and pedigree-based predictions revealed that the advantage of GS over the pedigree was moderate in populations without full-sibs. However, GS was less advantageous for within-family selections in elite families with few full-sibs and minimal Mendelian sampling variance. Overall, our results demonstrate the importance of applying GS for GY at the appropriate stage of the breeding cycle, and we speculate that gains can be maximized if it is implemented in early-generation within-family selections.

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Main Authors: Juliana, P., Singh, R.P., Poland, J.A., Mondal, S., Crossa, J., Montesinos-Lopez, O.A., Dreisigacker, S., Perez-Rodriguez, P., Huerta-Espino, J., Crespo Herrera, L.A., Velu, G.
Format: Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Crop Science Society of America 2018
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, PLANT SCIENCES, GENETIC INHERITANCE, SOFT WHEAT, GENETIC GAIN, MARKER-ASSISTED SELECTION,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10883/19789
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spelling dig-cimmyt-10883-197892023-12-01T16:41:57Z Prospects and challenges of applied genomic selection-a new paradigm in breeding for grain yield in bread wheat Juliana, P. Singh, R.P. Poland, J.A. Mondal, S. Crossa, J. Montesinos-Lopez, O.A. Dreisigacker, S. Perez-Rodriguez, P. Huerta-Espino, J. Crespo Herrera, L.A. Velu, G. AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY PLANT SCIENCES GENETIC INHERITANCE SOFT WHEAT GENETIC GAIN MARKER-ASSISTED SELECTION Genomic selection (GS) has been promising for increasing genetic gains in several species. Therefore, we evaluated the potential integration of GS for grain yield (GY) in bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) in CIMMYT's elite yield trial nurseries. We observed that the genomic prediction accuracies within nurseries (0.44 and 0.35) were substantially higher than across-nursery accuracies (0.15 and 0.05) for GY evaluated in the bed and flat planting systems, respectively. The accuracies from using only a subset of 251 genotyping-by-sequencing markers were comparable to the accuracies using all 2038 markers. We also used the item-based collaborative filtering approach for incorporating other related traits in predicting GY and observed that it outperformed genomic predictions across nurseries, but was less predictive when trait correlations with GY were low. Furthermore, we compared GS and phenotypic selections (PS) and observed that at a selection intensity of 0.5, GS could select a maximum of 70.9 and 61.5% of the top lines and discard 71.5 and 60.5% of the poor lines selected or discarded by PS within and across nurseries, respectively. Comparisons of GS and pedigree-based predictions revealed that the advantage of GS over the pedigree was moderate in populations without full-sibs. However, GS was less advantageous for within-family selections in elite families with few full-sibs and minimal Mendelian sampling variance. Overall, our results demonstrate the importance of applying GS for GY at the appropriate stage of the breeding cycle, and we speculate that gains can be maximized if it is implemented in early-generation within-family selections. art. 180017 2019-01-16T15:23:44Z 2019-01-16T15:23:44Z 2018 Article 1940-3372 ISSN: 1940-3372 https://hdl.handle.net/10883/19789 10.3835/plantgenome2018.03.0017 English CIMMYT manages Intellectual Assets as International Public Goods. The user is free to download, print, store and share this work. In case you want to translate or create any other derivative work and share or distribute such translation/derivative work, please contact CIMMYT-Knowledge-Center@cgiar.org indicating the work you want to use and the kind of use you intend; CIMMYT will contact you with the sutable license for that purpose. Open Access PDF Madison, U.S. Crop Science Society of America 3 11 The Plant Genome
institution CIMMYT
collection DSpace
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cimmyt
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname CIMMYT Library
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
PLANT SCIENCES
GENETIC INHERITANCE
SOFT WHEAT
GENETIC GAIN
MARKER-ASSISTED SELECTION
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
PLANT SCIENCES
GENETIC INHERITANCE
SOFT WHEAT
GENETIC GAIN
MARKER-ASSISTED SELECTION
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
PLANT SCIENCES
GENETIC INHERITANCE
SOFT WHEAT
GENETIC GAIN
MARKER-ASSISTED SELECTION
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
PLANT SCIENCES
GENETIC INHERITANCE
SOFT WHEAT
GENETIC GAIN
MARKER-ASSISTED SELECTION
Juliana, P.
Singh, R.P.
Poland, J.A.
Mondal, S.
Crossa, J.
Montesinos-Lopez, O.A.
Dreisigacker, S.
Perez-Rodriguez, P.
Huerta-Espino, J.
Crespo Herrera, L.A.
Velu, G.
Prospects and challenges of applied genomic selection-a new paradigm in breeding for grain yield in bread wheat
description Genomic selection (GS) has been promising for increasing genetic gains in several species. Therefore, we evaluated the potential integration of GS for grain yield (GY) in bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) in CIMMYT's elite yield trial nurseries. We observed that the genomic prediction accuracies within nurseries (0.44 and 0.35) were substantially higher than across-nursery accuracies (0.15 and 0.05) for GY evaluated in the bed and flat planting systems, respectively. The accuracies from using only a subset of 251 genotyping-by-sequencing markers were comparable to the accuracies using all 2038 markers. We also used the item-based collaborative filtering approach for incorporating other related traits in predicting GY and observed that it outperformed genomic predictions across nurseries, but was less predictive when trait correlations with GY were low. Furthermore, we compared GS and phenotypic selections (PS) and observed that at a selection intensity of 0.5, GS could select a maximum of 70.9 and 61.5% of the top lines and discard 71.5 and 60.5% of the poor lines selected or discarded by PS within and across nurseries, respectively. Comparisons of GS and pedigree-based predictions revealed that the advantage of GS over the pedigree was moderate in populations without full-sibs. However, GS was less advantageous for within-family selections in elite families with few full-sibs and minimal Mendelian sampling variance. Overall, our results demonstrate the importance of applying GS for GY at the appropriate stage of the breeding cycle, and we speculate that gains can be maximized if it is implemented in early-generation within-family selections.
format Article
topic_facet AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
PLANT SCIENCES
GENETIC INHERITANCE
SOFT WHEAT
GENETIC GAIN
MARKER-ASSISTED SELECTION
author Juliana, P.
Singh, R.P.
Poland, J.A.
Mondal, S.
Crossa, J.
Montesinos-Lopez, O.A.
Dreisigacker, S.
Perez-Rodriguez, P.
Huerta-Espino, J.
Crespo Herrera, L.A.
Velu, G.
author_facet Juliana, P.
Singh, R.P.
Poland, J.A.
Mondal, S.
Crossa, J.
Montesinos-Lopez, O.A.
Dreisigacker, S.
Perez-Rodriguez, P.
Huerta-Espino, J.
Crespo Herrera, L.A.
Velu, G.
author_sort Juliana, P.
title Prospects and challenges of applied genomic selection-a new paradigm in breeding for grain yield in bread wheat
title_short Prospects and challenges of applied genomic selection-a new paradigm in breeding for grain yield in bread wheat
title_full Prospects and challenges of applied genomic selection-a new paradigm in breeding for grain yield in bread wheat
title_fullStr Prospects and challenges of applied genomic selection-a new paradigm in breeding for grain yield in bread wheat
title_full_unstemmed Prospects and challenges of applied genomic selection-a new paradigm in breeding for grain yield in bread wheat
title_sort prospects and challenges of applied genomic selection-a new paradigm in breeding for grain yield in bread wheat
publisher Crop Science Society of America
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/10883/19789
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