Title
Assessing SNP Heterozygosity in Potato (Solanum) Species— Bias Due to Missing and Non-allelic Genotypes
Date Issued
01 August 2021
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
University of Wisconsin
Publisher(s)
Springer
Abstract
Potato has about 100 related wild Solanum species growing naturally in the Americas. The US Potato Genebank aims to keep samples useful for research and breeding to improve the crop, often in the form of botanical seed families. A key component of genebank efficiency is assessing diversity within and among populations, and DNA marker sequence diversity is a powerful proxy for trait diversity. We previously reported on three factors which can cause under-estimation of heterozygosity: ascertainment, allele frequency, and ploidy bias. We here report, using GBS data for four diploid potato species, that average percent of apparent heterozygosity increases as data is more complete—the maximum difference was 2% heterozygotes when only a few individuals are called, to 36% when nearly all individuals were called. However, there was evidence that estimates of average heterozygosity based only on loci for which every individual has data can also be biased upward. Implausibly high levels of heterozygosity suggest non-segregating non-homologous SNPs, which occurred as 5–9% of all loci with complete data. We propose that best estimates of average heterozygosity in unselected seedlings should be based on loci with data for all samples after eliminating those loci that appear to be artificially fixed as heterozygous, which reduces observed heterozygote frequency by 16–26%. On that basis, the wild species examined have similar heterozygosity to the cultivated phureja.
Start page
328
End page
332
Volume
98
Issue
4
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
AgronomĂa
Agricultura
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85115148413
Source
American Journal of Potato Research
ISSN of the container
1099209X
Sponsor(s)
Financial support for collection of S. jamesii samples was provided by the National Science Foundation, award no. BCS-1827414. The authors thank the University of Wisconsin Biotechnology Center DNA Sequencing Facility for providing GBS facilities and services.
Sources of information:
Directorio de ProducciĂłn CientĂfica
Scopus