Frontiers in Plant Science (Sep 2014)

Meta-analysis of Metabolome QTLs in Arabidopsis: trying to estimate the network size controlling genetic variation of the metabolome.

  • Bindu eJoseph,
  • Susanna eAtwell,
  • Jason eCorwin,
  • Baohua eLi,
  • Daniel J Kliebenstein,
  • Daniel J Kliebenstein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2014.00461
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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A central goal of systems biology is to develop models that are both predictive and accurately describe the biological system. One complexity to this endeavor is that it is possible to develop models that appear predictive even if they use far fewer components than the biological system itself uses for the same process. This problem also occurs in quantitative genetics where it is often possible to describe the variation in a system using fewer genes than are actually variable due to the complications of linkage between causal polymorphisms and population structure. Thus, there is a crucial need to begin an empirical investigation into the true number of components that are used by biological systems to determine a phenotypic outcome. In this study, we conduct use a meta-analysis of directly comparable metabolomics quantitative studies using quantitative trait locus mapping and genome wide association mapping to work show that it is currently not possible to estimate how towards an estimation of how many genetic loci are truly polymorphic within Arabidopsis thaliana. Our analysis shows that it would require the analysis of at least a 1000 line bi-parental population to begin to estimate how many polymorphic loci that control metabolic variation within Arabidopsis. Understanding the base number of loci that are actually involved in determining variation in metabolic systems is fundamental to developing systems models that are truly reflective of how metabolism is modulated within a living organism.

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