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Optimal cross selection for long-term genetic gain in two-part programs with rapid recurrent genomic selection
Thursday, 2018/09/27 | 07:54:35

Gregor Gorjanc, R. Chris Gaynor, John M. Hickey

Theoretical and Applied Genetics, September 2018, Volume 131, Issue 9, pp 1953–1966

 

Key message Optimal cross selection increases long-term genetic gain of two-part programs with rapid recurrent genomic selection. It achieves this by optimising efficiency of converting genetic diversity into genetic gain through reducing the loss of genetic diversity and reducing the drop of genomic prediction accuracy with rapid cycling.

Abstract

This study evaluates optimal cross selection to balance selection and maintenance of genetic diversity in two-part plant breeding programs with rapid recurrent genomic selection. The two-part program reorganises a conventional breeding program into a population improvement component with recurrent genomic selection to increase the mean value of germplasm and a product development component with standard methods to develop new lines. Rapid recurrent genomic selection has a large potential, but is challenging due to genotyping costs or genetic drift. Here we simulate a wheat breeding program for 20 years and compare optimal cross selection against truncation selection in the population improvement component with one to six cycles per year. With truncation selection we crossed a small or a large number of parents. With optimal cross selection we jointly optimised selection, maintenance of genetic diversity, and cross allocation with AlphaMate program. The results show that the two-part program with optimal cross selection delivered the largest genetic gain that increased with the increasing number of cycles. With four cycles per year optimal cross selection had 78% (15%) higher long-term genetic gain than truncation selection with a small (large) number of parents. Higher genetic gain was achieved through higher efficiency of converting genetic diversity into genetic gain; optimal cross selection quadrupled (doubled) efficiency of truncation selection with a small (large) number of parents. Optimal cross selection also reduced the drop of genomic selection accuracy due to the drift between training and prediction populations. In conclusion optimal cross selection enables optimal management and exploitation of population improvement germplasm in two-part programs.

 

See: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00122-018-3125-3

Figure 1: Scheme of breeding strategies (the conventional strategy is based on the product development component that implicitly also performs population improvement, while the two-part strategy includes an explicit population improvement component with recurrent selection; the dashed line indicates initialisation of the population improvement component; N1 and N2 correspond to the number of lines in Table 1)

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