PLoS ONE (Oct 2009)

Heterosis is prevalent for multiple traits in diverse maize germplasm.

  • Sherry A Flint-Garcia,
  • Edward S Buckler,
  • Peter Tiffin,
  • Elhan Ersoz,
  • Nathan M Springer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0007433
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 10
p. e7433

Abstract

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BackgroundHeterosis describes the superior phenotypes observed in hybrids relative to their inbred parents. Maize is a model system for studying heterosis due to the high levels of yield heterosis and commercial use of hybrids.MethodsThe inbred lines from an association mapping panel were crossed to a common inbred line, B73, to generate nearly 300 hybrid genotypes. Heterosis was evaluated for seventeen phenotypic traits in multiple environments. The majority of hybrids exhibit better-parent heterosis in most of the hybrids measured. Correlations between the levels of heterosis for different traits were generally weak, suggesting that the genetic basis of heterosis is trait-dependent.ConclusionsThe ability to predict heterosis levels using inbred phenotype or genetic distance between the parents varied for the different traits. For some traits it is possible to explain a significant proportion of the heterosis variation using linear modeling while other traits are more difficult to predict.