Selecting for nut characteristics in macadamia using a genome-wide association study

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Abstract

Current macadamia breeding programs involve a lengthy and laborious twostage selection process: evaluation of a large number of unreplicated seedling progeny, followed by replicated trials of clonally propagated elite seedlings. Yield component traits, such as nut-in-shell weight (NW), kernel weight (KW), and kernel recovery (KR) are commercially important, are more easily measured than yield, and have a higher heritability. A genome-wide association study (GWAS) combined with marker-assisted selection offers an opportunity to reduce the time of candidate evaluation. In this study, a total of 281 progeny from 32 families, and 18 of their 29 parents have been genotyped for 7126 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers. A GWAS was performed using ASReml with 4352 SNPs. We found five SNPs significantly associated with NW, nine with KW, and one with KR. Further, three of the top 10 markers forNWandKWwere shared between the two traits. Future macadamia breeding could involve prescreening of individuals for desired traits using these significantly associated markers, with only predicted elite individuals continuing to the second stage of selection, thus potentially reducing the selection process by 7 years.

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O’Connor, K., Hayes, B., Hardner, C., Alam, M., & Topp, B. (2019). Selecting for nut characteristics in macadamia using a genome-wide association study. HortScience, 54(4), 632–629. https://doi.org/10.21273/HORTSCI13297-18

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