PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

High throughput SNP discovery and genotyping in hexaploid wheat.

  • Hélène Rimbert,
  • Benoît Darrier,
  • Julien Navarro,
  • Jonathan Kitt,
  • Frédéric Choulet,
  • Magalie Leveugle,
  • Jorge Duarte,
  • Nathalie Rivière,
  • Kellye Eversole,
  • International Wheat Genome Sequencing Consortium,
  • Jacques Le Gouis,
  • on behalf The BreedWheat Consortium,
  • Alessandro Davassi,
  • François Balfourier,
  • Marie-Christine Le Paslier,
  • Aurélie Berard,
  • Dominique Brunel,
  • Catherine Feuillet,
  • Charles Poncet,
  • Pierre Sourdille,
  • Etienne Paux

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186329
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
p. e0186329

Abstract

Read online

Because of their abundance and their amenability to high-throughput genotyping techniques, Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) are powerful tools for efficient genetics and genomics studies, including characterization of genetic resources, genome-wide association studies and genomic selection. In wheat, most of the previous SNP discovery initiatives targeted the coding fraction, leaving almost 98% of the wheat genome largely unexploited. Here we report on the use of whole-genome resequencing data from eight wheat lines to mine for SNPs in the genic, the repetitive and non-repetitive intergenic fractions of the wheat genome. Eventually, we identified 3.3 million SNPs, 49% being located on the B-genome, 41% on the A-genome and 10% on the D-genome. We also describe the development of the TaBW280K high-throughput genotyping array containing 280,226 SNPs. Performance of this chip was examined by genotyping a set of 96 wheat accessions representing the worldwide diversity. Sixty-nine percent of the SNPs can be efficiently scored, half of them showing a diploid-like clustering. The TaBW280K was proven to be a very efficient tool for diversity analyses, as well as for breeding as it can discriminate between closely related elite varieties. Finally, the TaBW280K array was used to genotype a population derived from a cross between Chinese Spring and Renan, leading to the construction a dense genetic map comprising 83,721 markers. The results described here will provide the wheat community with powerful tools for both basic and applied research.