An Automated Image Analysis Pipeline Enables Genetic Studies of Shoot and Root Morphology in Carrot (Daucus carota L.).

Resource Type: 
Publication
Publication Type: 
Journal Article
Title: 
An Automated Image Analysis Pipeline Enables Genetic Studies of Shoot and Root Morphology in Carrot (Daucus carota L.).
Authors: 
Turner SD, Ellison SL, Senalik DA, Simon PW, Spalding EP, Miller ND
Series Name: 
Frontiers in plant science
Journal Abbreviation: 
Front Plant Sci
Volume: 
9
Page Numbers: 
1703
Publication Year: 
2018
Publication Date: 
2018
DOI: 
10.3389/fpls.2018.01703
ISSN: 
1664-462X
PISSN: 
1664-462X
Cross Reference: 
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Citation: 
Turner SD, Ellison SL, Senalik DA, Simon PW, Spalding EP, Miller ND. An Automated Image Analysis Pipeline Enables Genetic Studies of Shoot and Root Morphology in Carrot (Daucus carota L.).. Frontiers in plant science. 2018; 9:1703.
Abstract: 

Carrot is a globally important crop, yet efficient and accurate methods for quantifying its most important agronomic traits are lacking. To address this problem, we developed an automated image analysis platform that extracts components of size and shape for carrot shoots and roots, which are necessary to advance carrot breeding and genetics. This method reliably measured variation in shoot size and shape, petiole number, petiole length, and petiole width as evidenced by high correlations with hundreds of manual measurements. Similarly, root length and biomass were accurately measured from the images. This platform also quantified shoot and root shapes in terms of principal components, which do not have traditional, manually measurable equivalents. We applied the pipeline in a study of a six-parent diallel population and an F2 mapping population consisting of 316 individuals. We found high levels of repeatability within a growing environment, with low to moderate repeatability across environments. We also observed co-localization of quantitative trait loci for shoot and root characteristics on chromosomes 1, 2, and 7, suggesting these traits are controlled by genetic linkage and/or pleiotropy. By increasing the number of individuals and phenotypes that can be reliably quantified, the development of a rapid, automated image analysis pipeline to measure carrot shoot and root morphology will expand the scope and scale of breeding and genetic studies.

Publication Model: 
Electronic-eCollection
Language: 
English
Language Abbr: 
eng
Journal Country: 
Switzerland