Semi-automated feature extraction from RGB images for sorghum panicle architecture GWAS

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2018-01-01
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Srinivasan, Srikant
Mirnezami, Seyed
Fu, Qi
Attigala, Lakshmi
Salas-Fernandez, Maria
Ganapathysubramanian, Baskar
Schnable, Patrick
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Salas-Fernandez, Maria
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Mechanical Engineering
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Agronomy

The Department of Agronomy seeks to teach the study of the farm-field, its crops, and its science and management. It originally consisted of three sub-departments to do this: Soils, Farm-Crops, and Agricultural Engineering (which became its own department in 1907). Today, the department teaches crop sciences and breeding, soil sciences, meteorology, agroecology, and biotechnology.

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The Department of Agronomy was formed in 1902. From 1917 to 1935 it was known as the Department of Farm Crops and Soils.

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1902–present

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  • Department of Farm Crops and Soils (1917–1935)

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Mechanical EngineeringAgronomyElectrical and Computer EngineeringPlant Sciences Institute
Abstract

Because structural variation in the inflorescence architecture of cereal crops can influence yield, it is of interest to identify the genes responsible for this variation. However, the manual collection of inflorescence phenotypes can be time-consuming for the large populations needed to conduct GWAS (genome-wide association studies) and is difficult for multi-dimensional traits such as volume. A semi-automated phenotyping pipeline (Toolkit for Inflorescence Measurement, TIM) was developed and used to extract uni- and multi-dimensional features from images of 1,064 sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) panicles from 272 genotypes comprising a subset of the Sorghum Association Panel (SAP). GWAS detected 35 unique SNPs associated with variation in inflorescence architecture. The accuracy of the TIM pipeline is supported by the fact that several of these trait-associated SNPs (TASs) are located within chromosomal regions associated with similar traits in previously published QTL and GWAS analysis of sorghum. Additionally, sorghum homologs of maize (Zea mays) and rice (Oryza sativa) genes known to affect inflorescence architecture are enriched in the vicinities of TASs. Finally, our TASs are enriched within genomic regions that exhibit high levels of divergence between converted tropical lines and cultivars, consistent with the hypothesis that these chromosomal intervals were targets of selection during modern breeding.

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This is a manuscript of an article published as Zhou, Yan, Srikant Srinivasan, Seyed Vahid Mirnezami, Aaron Kusmec, Qi Fu, Lakshmi Attigala, Maria G. Salas Fernandez, Baskar Ganapathysubramanian, and Patrick S. Schnable. "Semi-automated feature extraction from RGB images for sorghum panicle architecture GWAS." Plant Physiology (2018). DOI: 10.1104/pp.18.00974. Posted with permission.

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Mon Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2018
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