Identifying mechanisms and pathways involved in gene–environment interplay and phenotypic plasticity is a long-standing challenge.It is highly desirable to establish an integrated framework with an environmental dime...Identifying mechanisms and pathways involved in gene–environment interplay and phenotypic plasticity is a long-standing challenge.It is highly desirable to establish an integrated framework with an environmental dimension for complex trait dissection and prediction.A critical step is to identify an environmental index that is both biologically relevant and estimable for new environments.With extensive field-observed complex traits,environmental profiles,and genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms for three major crops(maize,wheat,and oat),we demonstrated that identifying such an environmental index(i.e.,a combination of environmental parameter and growth window)enables genome-wide association studies and genomic selection of complex traits to be conducted with an explicit environmental dimension.Interestingly,genes identified for two reaction-norm parameters(i.e.,intercept and slope)derived from flowering time values along the environmental index were less colocalized for a diverse maize panel than for wheat and oat breeding panels,agreeing with the different diversity levels and genetic constitutions of the panels.In addition,we showcased the usefulness of this framework for systematically forecasting the performance of diverse germplasm panels in new environments.This general framework and the companion CERIS-JGRA analytical package should facilitate biologically informed dissection of complex traits,enhanced performance prediction in breeding for future climates,and coordinated efforts to enrich our understanding of mechanisms underlying phenotypic variation.展开更多
基金supported by the Agriculture and Food Research Initiative competitive grant(2021-67013-33833)the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture,the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy program(DEAR0000826)+1 种基金the Department of Energy,the National Science Foundation(IOS-1546657)the Iowa State University Ray-mond F.Baker Center for Plant Breeding,and the Iowa State University Plant Sciences Institute.
文摘Identifying mechanisms and pathways involved in gene–environment interplay and phenotypic plasticity is a long-standing challenge.It is highly desirable to establish an integrated framework with an environmental dimension for complex trait dissection and prediction.A critical step is to identify an environmental index that is both biologically relevant and estimable for new environments.With extensive field-observed complex traits,environmental profiles,and genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms for three major crops(maize,wheat,and oat),we demonstrated that identifying such an environmental index(i.e.,a combination of environmental parameter and growth window)enables genome-wide association studies and genomic selection of complex traits to be conducted with an explicit environmental dimension.Interestingly,genes identified for two reaction-norm parameters(i.e.,intercept and slope)derived from flowering time values along the environmental index were less colocalized for a diverse maize panel than for wheat and oat breeding panels,agreeing with the different diversity levels and genetic constitutions of the panels.In addition,we showcased the usefulness of this framework for systematically forecasting the performance of diverse germplasm panels in new environments.This general framework and the companion CERIS-JGRA analytical package should facilitate biologically informed dissection of complex traits,enhanced performance prediction in breeding for future climates,and coordinated efforts to enrich our understanding of mechanisms underlying phenotypic variation.