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Limited haplotype diversity underlies polygenic trait architecture across 70 years of wheat breeding

View ORCID ProfileMichael F. Scott, View ORCID ProfileNick Fradgley, View ORCID ProfileAlison R. Bentley, View ORCID ProfileThomas Brabbs, View ORCID ProfileFiona Corke, View ORCID ProfileKeith A. Gardner, Richard Horsnell, View ORCID ProfilePhil Howell, View ORCID ProfileOlufunmilayo Ladejobi, View ORCID ProfileIan J. Mackay, View ORCID ProfileRichard Mott, View ORCID ProfileJames Cockram
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.09.15.296533
Michael F. Scott
1UCL Genetics Institute, Gower St London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom
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Nick Fradgley
2NIAB, 93 Lawrence Weaver Road, Cambridge, CB3 0LE, United Kingdom
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Alison R. Bentley
2NIAB, 93 Lawrence Weaver Road, Cambridge, CB3 0LE, United Kingdom
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Thomas Brabbs
3Norwich Research Park Innovation Centre, Colney Ln, Norwich NR4 7UZ, United Kingdom
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Fiona Corke
4The National Plant Phenomics Centre, Institute of Biological, Rural and Environmental Sciences (IBERS), Aberystwyth University, Gogerddan, Aberystwyth, SY23 3EE, United Kingdom
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Keith A. Gardner
2NIAB, 93 Lawrence Weaver Road, Cambridge, CB3 0LE, United Kingdom
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Richard Horsnell
2NIAB, 93 Lawrence Weaver Road, Cambridge, CB3 0LE, United Kingdom
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Phil Howell
2NIAB, 93 Lawrence Weaver Road, Cambridge, CB3 0LE, United Kingdom
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Olufunmilayo Ladejobi
1UCL Genetics Institute, Gower St London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom
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  • ORCID record for Olufunmilayo Ladejobi
Ian J. Mackay
2NIAB, 93 Lawrence Weaver Road, Cambridge, CB3 0LE, United Kingdom
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Richard Mott
1UCL Genetics Institute, Gower St London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom
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  • For correspondence: r.mott@ucl.ac.uk james.cockram@niab.com
James Cockram
2NIAB, 93 Lawrence Weaver Road, Cambridge, CB3 0LE, United Kingdom
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  • For correspondence: r.mott@ucl.ac.uk james.cockram@niab.com
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Abstract

Background Breeding has helped improve bread wheat yield significantly over the last century. Understanding the potential for future crop improvement depends on relating segregating genetic variation to agronomic traits.

Results We bred NIAB Diverse MAGIC population, comprising over 500 recombinant inbred lines, descended from sixteen bread wheat varieties released between 1935-2004. We sequenced the founders’ exomes and promotors by capture. Despite being highly representative of North-West European wheat and capturing 73% of global polymorphism, we found 89% of genes contained no more than three haplotypes. We sequenced each line with 0.3x coverage whole-genome sequencing, and imputed 1.1M high-quality SNPs that were over 99% concordant with array genotypes. Imputation accuracy remained high at coverage as low as 0.076x, with or without the use of founder genomes as reference panels. We created a genotype-phenotype map for 47 traits over two years. We found 136 genome-wide significant associations, concentrated at 42 genetic loci with large and often pleiotropic effects. Outside of these loci most traits are polygenic, as revealed by multi-locus shrinkage modelling.

Conclusions Historically, wheat breeding has reshuffled a limited palette of haplotypes; continued improvement will require selection at dozens of loci of diminishing effect, as most of the major loci we mapped are known. Breeding to optimise one trait generates correlated trait changes, exemplified by the negative trade-off between yield and protein content, unless selection and recombination can break critical unfavourable trait-trait associations. Finally, low coverage whole genome sequencing of bread wheat populations is an economical and accurate genotyping strategy.

Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Copyright 
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC 4.0 International license.
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Posted September 15, 2020.
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Limited haplotype diversity underlies polygenic trait architecture across 70 years of wheat breeding
Michael F. Scott, Nick Fradgley, Alison R. Bentley, Thomas Brabbs, Fiona Corke, Keith A. Gardner, Richard Horsnell, Phil Howell, Olufunmilayo Ladejobi, Ian J. Mackay, Richard Mott, James Cockram
bioRxiv 2020.09.15.296533; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.09.15.296533
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Limited haplotype diversity underlies polygenic trait architecture across 70 years of wheat breeding
Michael F. Scott, Nick Fradgley, Alison R. Bentley, Thomas Brabbs, Fiona Corke, Keith A. Gardner, Richard Horsnell, Phil Howell, Olufunmilayo Ladejobi, Ian J. Mackay, Richard Mott, James Cockram
bioRxiv 2020.09.15.296533; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.09.15.296533

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