Gene expression analyses in maize inbreds and hybrids with varying levels of heterosis

BACKGROUND:Heterosis is the superior performance of F1 hybrid progeny relative to the parental phenotypes. Maize exhibits heterosis for a wide range of traits, however the magnitude of heterosis is highly variable depending on the choice of parents and the trait(s) measured. We have used expression...

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Main Authors: Stupar, Robert, Gardiner, Jack, Oldre, Aaron, Haun, William, Chandler, Vicki, Springer, Nathan
Other Authors: Center for Plant and Microbial Genomics, Department of Plant Biology, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul MN 55108, USA
Language:en
Published: BioMed Central 2008
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/610080
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/610080
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6100802016-05-22T03:01:31Z Gene expression analyses in maize inbreds and hybrids with varying levels of heterosis Stupar, Robert Gardiner, Jack Oldre, Aaron Haun, William Chandler, Vicki Springer, Nathan Center for Plant and Microbial Genomics, Department of Plant Biology, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul MN 55108, USA Department of Plant Science, and BIO5 Institute, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA Department of Agronomy and Plant Genetics, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul MN 55108, USA BACKGROUND:Heterosis is the superior performance of F1 hybrid progeny relative to the parental phenotypes. Maize exhibits heterosis for a wide range of traits, however the magnitude of heterosis is highly variable depending on the choice of parents and the trait(s) measured. We have used expression profiling to determine whether the level, or types, of non-additive gene expression vary in maize hybrids with different levels of genetic diversity or heterosis.RESULTS:We observed that the distributions of better parent heterosis among a series of 25 maize hybrids generally do not exhibit significant correlations between different traits. Expression profiling analyses for six of these hybrids, chosen to represent diversity in genotypes and heterosis responses, revealed a correlation between genetic diversity and transcriptional variation. The majority of differentially expressed genes in each of the six different hybrids exhibited additive expression patterns, and ~25% exhibited statistically significant non-additive expression profiles. Among the non-additive profiles, ~80% exhibited hybrid expression levels between the parental levels, ~20% exhibited hybrid expression levels at the parental levels and ~1% exhibited hybrid levels outside the parental range.CONCLUSION:We have found that maize inbred genetic diversity is correlated with transcriptional variation. However, sampling of seedling tissues indicated that the frequencies of additive and non-additive expression patterns are very similar across a range of hybrid lines. These findings suggest that heterosis is probably not a consequence of higher levels of additive or non-additive expression, but may be related to transcriptional variation between parents. The lack of correlation between better parent heterosis levels for different traits suggests that transcriptional diversity at specific sets of genes may influence heterosis for different traits. 2008 Article BMC Plant Biology 2008, 8:33 doi:10.1186/1471-2229-8-33 10.1186/1471-2229-8-33 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/610080 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/610080 1471-2229 BMC Plant Biology en http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2229/8/33 © 2008 Stupar et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) BioMed Central
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description BACKGROUND:Heterosis is the superior performance of F1 hybrid progeny relative to the parental phenotypes. Maize exhibits heterosis for a wide range of traits, however the magnitude of heterosis is highly variable depending on the choice of parents and the trait(s) measured. We have used expression profiling to determine whether the level, or types, of non-additive gene expression vary in maize hybrids with different levels of genetic diversity or heterosis.RESULTS:We observed that the distributions of better parent heterosis among a series of 25 maize hybrids generally do not exhibit significant correlations between different traits. Expression profiling analyses for six of these hybrids, chosen to represent diversity in genotypes and heterosis responses, revealed a correlation between genetic diversity and transcriptional variation. The majority of differentially expressed genes in each of the six different hybrids exhibited additive expression patterns, and ~25% exhibited statistically significant non-additive expression profiles. Among the non-additive profiles, ~80% exhibited hybrid expression levels between the parental levels, ~20% exhibited hybrid expression levels at the parental levels and ~1% exhibited hybrid levels outside the parental range.CONCLUSION:We have found that maize inbred genetic diversity is correlated with transcriptional variation. However, sampling of seedling tissues indicated that the frequencies of additive and non-additive expression patterns are very similar across a range of hybrid lines. These findings suggest that heterosis is probably not a consequence of higher levels of additive or non-additive expression, but may be related to transcriptional variation between parents. The lack of correlation between better parent heterosis levels for different traits suggests that transcriptional diversity at specific sets of genes may influence heterosis for different traits.
author2 Center for Plant and Microbial Genomics, Department of Plant Biology, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul MN 55108, USA
author_facet Center for Plant and Microbial Genomics, Department of Plant Biology, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul MN 55108, USA
Stupar, Robert
Gardiner, Jack
Oldre, Aaron
Haun, William
Chandler, Vicki
Springer, Nathan
author Stupar, Robert
Gardiner, Jack
Oldre, Aaron
Haun, William
Chandler, Vicki
Springer, Nathan
spellingShingle Stupar, Robert
Gardiner, Jack
Oldre, Aaron
Haun, William
Chandler, Vicki
Springer, Nathan
Gene expression analyses in maize inbreds and hybrids with varying levels of heterosis
author_sort Stupar, Robert
title Gene expression analyses in maize inbreds and hybrids with varying levels of heterosis
title_short Gene expression analyses in maize inbreds and hybrids with varying levels of heterosis
title_full Gene expression analyses in maize inbreds and hybrids with varying levels of heterosis
title_fullStr Gene expression analyses in maize inbreds and hybrids with varying levels of heterosis
title_full_unstemmed Gene expression analyses in maize inbreds and hybrids with varying levels of heterosis
title_sort gene expression analyses in maize inbreds and hybrids with varying levels of heterosis
publisher BioMed Central
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/610080
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/610080
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