Abstract
Epistatic interactions among loci are expected to contribute substantially to variation of quantitative traits. The objectives of our research were to (i) compare a classical mixed-model approach with a combined mixed-model and analysis of variance approach for detecting epistatic interactions; (ii) examine using computer simulations the statistical power to detect additive-additive, additive-dominance and dominance-dominance epistatic interactions and (iii) detect epistatic interactions between candidate genes for resistance to leaf blight in a set of tetraploid potato clones. Our study was based on the genotypic and phenotypic data of 184 tetraploid potato cultivars as well as computer simulations. The number of significant (α * = 1 × 10 -6) epistatic interactions ranged for the three examined traits from 3 to 32. Our findings suggested that the combined mixed-model and analysis of variance approach leads in comparison with the classical mixed-model approach not to an increased rate of false-positives. The results of the computer simulations suggested that, if molecular markers are available that are in high LD (D′ > 0.9) with the trait-coding loci, the statistical power to detect epistatic interactions, which explain 5-10% of the phenotypic variance, was of a size that seems promising for their detection. © 2011 Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved.
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Stich, B., & Gebhardt, C. (2011). Detection of epistatic interactions in association mapping populations: An example from tetraploid potato. Heredity, 107(6), 537–547. https://doi.org/10.1038/hdy.2011.40
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