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Article|26 Oct 2016|OPEN
High-density SNP-based genetic maps for the parents of an outcrossed and a selfed tetraploid garden rose cross, inferred from admixed progeny using the 68k rose SNP array
Mirjana Vukosavljev1 , Paul Arens1 , Roeland E Voorrips1 , Wendy PC van ‘t Westende1 , GD Esselink1 , Peter M Bourke1 , Peter Cox2 , W Eric van de Weg1 , Richard GF Visser1 , Chris Maliepaard1 and Marinus JM Smulders,1 ,
1Wageningen UR Plant Breeding, Wageningen University & Research, NL-6700 AJ Wageningen, The Netherlands
2Roath BV, Eindhoven, The Netherlands
*Corresponding author. E-mail: rene.smulders@wur.nl

Horticulture Research 3,
Article number: 52 (2016)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/hortres.2016.52
Views: 920

Received: 26 Aug 2016
Revised: 26 Sep 2016
Accepted: 30 Sep 2016
Published online: 26 Oct 2016

Abstract

Dense genetic maps create a base for QTL analysis of important traits and future implementation of marker-assisted breeding. In tetraploid rose, the existing linkage maps include <300 markers to cover 28 linkage groups (4 homologous sets of 7 chromosomes). Here we used the 68k WagRhSNP Axiom single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array for rose, in combination with SNP dosage calling at the tetraploid level, to genotype offspring from the garden rose cultivar ‘Red New Dawn’. The offspring proved to be not from a single bi-parental cross. In rose breeding, crosses with unintended parents occur regularly. We developed a strategy to separate progeny into putative populations, even while one of the parents was unknown, using principle component analysis on pairwise genetic distances based on sets of selected SNP markers that were homozygous, and therefore uninformative for one parent. One of the inferred populations was consistent with self-fertilization of ‘Red New Dawn’. Subsequently, linkage maps were generated for a bi-parental and a self-pollinated population with ‘Red New Dawn’ as the common maternal parent. The densest map, for the selfed parent, had 1929 SNP markers on 25 linkage groups, covering 1765.5 cM at an average marker distance of 0.9 cM. Synteny with the strawberry (Fragaria vesca) genome was extensive. Rose ICM1 corresponded to F. vesca pseudochromosome 7 (Fv7), ICM4 to Fv4, ICM5 to Fv3, ICM6 to Fv2 and ICM7 to Fv5. Rose ICM2 corresponded to parts of F. vesca pseudochromosomes 1 and 6, whereas ICM3 is syntenic to the remainder of Fv6.