Molecular dissection of quantitative traits: progress and prospects.
Open Access
- 1 November 1995
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Genome Research
- Vol. 5 (4) , 321-333
- https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.5.4.321
Abstract
QTL mapping is an increasingly useful approach to the study and manipulation of complex traits important in agriculture, evolution, and medicine. The molecular dissection of quantitative phenotypes, supplementing the principles of classical quantitative genetics, is accelerating progress in the manipulation of plant and animal genomes. A growing appreciation of the similarities among different organisms and the usefulness of comparative genetic information is making genome analysis more efficient, and providing new opportunities for using model systems to overcome the limitations of less-favorable systems. The expanding repertoire of techniques and information available for studying heredity is removing obstacles to the cloning of QTLs. Although QTL mapping alone is limited to a resolution of 0.1%-1.0% of a genome, use of QTL mapping in conjunction with a search for mapped candidate genes, with emerging technologies for isolation of genes expressed under conditions likely to account for the quantitative phenotype, and with ever more efficient megabase DNA manipulation and characterization bodes well for the prospect of isolating the genetic determinants of QTLs in the foreseeable future. In the words of Thoday (1961), "An extensive attack on quantitative genetics made from this point of view as well as the biometric approach should be a great help in answering questions concerning the nature of polygenes...."Keywords
This publication has 56 references indexed in Scilit:
- Genetic mapping of floral traits associated with reproductive isolation in monkeyflowers (Mimulus)Nature, 1995
- Loss of genetic diversity from heterogeneous self-pollinating genebank accessionsTheoretical and Applied Genetics, 1994
- Pastoral syntenyNature, 1993
- Genetic dissection of pollen competitive ability in maizeHeredity, 1992
- The use of CXB recombinant inbred mice to detect quantitative trait loci in behaviorPhysiology & Behavior, 1992
- Maximum likelihood estimation of linkage between a marker gene and a quantitative trait locus. II. Application to backcross and doubled haploid populationsHeredity, 1991
- Detection of epistasis and linkage of interacting genes in the presence of reciprocal differencesHeredity, 1987
- A possible technique for isolating genic DNA for quantitative traits in plantsJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1985
- The expected distribution of marker-linked quantitative effects in crosses between inbred linesHeredity, 1979
- Location of PolygenesNature, 1961