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Inheritance of purple pigmentation was studied in F2, F3 and F4 families derived from an initial cross between P4201 [58262⊗] and B6320 [96'606-4]. P4201 is an inbred line with purple outer phloem and yellow xylem storage roots and purple leaves that was derived from a cross between inbred P9547 with purple xylem and phloem root color derived from Central Anatolia, and B2566, an inbred with orange root color from diverse European sources. B6320 is an inbred with orange roots and green petioles derived from the European open-pollinated cultivars Nantes and Camberley. A single F1 plant with purple root outer phloem and yellow xylem, and purple leaves, was self-pollinated to produce the F2 population 70349 (N = 519), which was used for genetic mapping studies. Total genomic DNA of individual plants from 70349, 2170 and 10117 populations was isolated from lyophilized leaves following the protocol described by Murray and Thompson and quantified using Pico Green (Invitrogen, Paisley, UK). The linkage map was constructed using 187 F2 individuals from 70349. A collection of 4000 published SNPs developed from carrot transcriptome data and 40 published SSR markers with known chromosome location were used. SNPs were genotyped using the KASPar chemistry, which is a competitive allele-specific PCR SNP genotyping system using FRET quencher cassette oligos (http://www.lgcgroup.com). SNPs were coded with a ‘K’ followed by four digit numbers (e.g. K0001). SNPs located within carotenoid or anthocyanin biosynthetic genes were labeled according to the gene abbreviation. SSR primer pairs were evaluated using a fluorescent method as described before. JoinMap 4.0 software was used for mapping. Scores of all markers used for mapping were converted into genotype codes using the A/H/B system for co-dominant and A/C, B/D system for dominant markers segregating in F2 population. The linkage groups (LGs) were obtained at a LOD threshold value >3.0. Regression mapping algorithm and Haldane’s mapping function was used to calculate genetic distances among marker loci. Markers and genotypes with more than 10% of missing data were excluded from the analysis. The degree of marker segregation distortion in the F2 was determined by marker data comparison against the expected 3:1 and 1:2:1 ratio for dominant and codominant markers, respectively, using Chi square tests, where significant distortion was declared at P < 0.01. The marker order in each linkage group was examined for inconsistencies leading to false double recombination events using CheckMatrix (http://www.atgc.org/XLinkage). Markers with more than one inconsistent score were removed. In order to reduce the complexity of the final map figure, redundant markers, considering as such those that had no recombination among them and therefore shared the same map position, were removed from the image, leaving a single marker -the marker with the least amount of missing data- per map position. | cM | |
The mapping population comprised 188 F2 [(Scarlet Nantes × Camberley) × (Turkish × 2566B)] individuals, where (Scarlet Nantes × Camberley) and (Turkish × 2566B) designate two inbred lines derived from crosses of the four parental stocks noted, and the F2 population was derived from self-pollinating a single F1 plant. The mapping population is henceforth referred to as 70349 F2. JoinMap 4.0 software was used for mapping. Scores of all DArT markers were converted into genotype codes using the AC/BD system for dominant markers segregating in F2 populations. The linkage groups (LGs) were obtained at a LOD threshold value >3.0. We used regression mapping algorithm and the Kosambi mapping function to calculate distances between marker loci. The DArT markers were named with the prefix ‘crPt’ where ‘cr’ stands for carrot, ‘P’ for PstI, and ‘t’ for TaqI, followed by numbers corresponding to their unique clone ID. Markers with more than 10 % of missing data were removed. Redundant markers were removed using the similarity loci function in JoinMap with a similarity threshold of 0.95. Each marker was tested against the expected segregation ratio using a Chi squared goodness of fit. The linkage map was first built with higher likelihood support for marker order following the second round of JoinMap. For the final map a third round of ordering of unmapped markers was performed using the fixed order function of markers as established at round two, allowing retention of the high likelihood support for markers as established at round two and providing the most likely position of all remaining informative markers. LGs were anchored to chromosomes through physical co-localization of DArT sequences and currently available SNPs with known chromosome locations on the assembled carrot contigs. | cM | |
Genetic maps of three populations were used to establish a consensus map suitable for guiding the construction of superscaffolds and pseudomolecules. Each linkage map consisted of a “full” dataset including all the segregating markers mapped in each population and a “bin” data set, consisting of markers representing unique recombination events. This is the "bin" data set map, the "full" data set map can be found here. The F2 population 70349, consisting of 187 individuals, resulted from an original cross between P4201 [58262⊗] (an inbred line with purple outer phloem and yellow xylem storage roots and purple petioles) and B6320 [96'606-4] (an inbred with orange roots and green petioles derived from the European open-pollinated cultivars Nantes and Camberley). The 70349 genetic map included 894 co-dominant markers (482 bins) with known sequence information. | cM | |
Genetic maps of three populations were used to establish a consensus map suitable for guiding the construction of superscaffolds and pseudomolecules. Each linkage map consisted of a “full” dataset including all the segregating markers mapped in each population and a “bin” data set, consisting of markers representing unique recombination events. This is the "full" data set map, the "bin" data set map can be found here. The F2 population 70349, consisting of 187 individuals, resulted from an original cross between P4201 [58262⊗] (an inbred line with purple outer phloem and yellow xylem storage roots and purple petioles) and B6320 [96'606-4] (an inbred with orange roots and green petioles derived from the European open-pollinated cultivars Nantes and Camberley). The 70349 genetic map included 894 co-dominant markers (482 bins) with known sequence information. | cM | |
Genetic maps of three populations were used to establish a consensus map suitable for guiding the construction of superscaffolds and pseudomolecules. Each linkage map consisted of a “full” dataset including all the segregating markers mapped in each population and a “bin” data set, consisting of markers representing unique recombination events. This is the "bin" data set map, the "full" data set map can be found here. Before merging the data from each population for map integration, the co-linearity of common markers was inspected using MapChart 2.2, and markers that were inconsistent were removed. In total, the three linkage maps shared 567 markers in the full dataset and 228 markers in the bin dataset. Both the “full” set and the “bin” dataset were used to generate a “full” and a “bin” integrated map using JoinMap 4.0 software. Population-specific locus genotype scores were then integrated into one dataset in each Linkage Group (LG) using the Combine Groups for Mapping Integration Module, followed by locus ordering by the Regression Mapping Module of JoinMap. The following parameters were used for the calculation: Kosambi's mapping function, LOD ≥ 3.0, REC frequency ≤0.4, goodness of fit jump threshold for removal of loci = 5.0, number of added loci after which a ripple is performed = 1, and third round = yes. Markers in common were used as anchor points. The integrated maps resulted in 2,073 markers for the full dataset and 918 markers for the bin dataset, covering 622 cM and 616 cM, respectively. The maps that were used to generate this integrated map are: | cM | |
Genetic maps of three populations were used to establish a consensus map suitable for guiding the construction of superscaffolds and pseudomolecules. Each linkage map consisted of a “full” dataset including all the segregating markers mapped in each population and a “bin” data set, consisting of markers representing unique recombination events. This is the "full" data set map, the "bin" data set map can be found here. Before merging the data from each population for map integration, the co-linearity of common markers was inspected using MapChart 2.2, and markers that were inconsistent were removed. In total, the three linkage maps shared 567 markers in the full dataset and 228 markers in the bin dataset. Both the “full” set and the “bin” dataset were used to generate a “full” and a “bin” integrated map using JoinMap 4.0 software. Population-specific locus genotype scores were then integrated into one dataset in each Linkage Group (LG) using the Combine Groups for Mapping Integration Module, followed by locus ordering by the Regression Mapping Module of JoinMap. The following parameters were used for the calculation: Kosambi's mapping function, LOD ≥ 3.0, REC frequency ≤0.4, goodness of fit jump threshold for removal of loci = 5.0, number of added loci after which a ripple is performed = 1, and third round = yes. Markers in common were used as anchor points. The integrated maps resulted in 2,073 markers for the full dataset and 918 markers for the bin dataset, covering 622 cM and 616 cM, respectively. The maps that were used to generate this integrated map are: | cM |