Abstract:
Dominant phenotype of a genetic marker provides incomplete information
about the marker genotype of an individual. A consequence of using this
incomplete information for mapping quantitative trait loci (QTL) is that
the inference of the genotype of a putative QTL flanked by a marker with
dominant phenotype will depend on the genotype or phenotype of the next
marker. This dependence can be extended further until a marker genotype
is fully observed. A general algorithm is derived to calculate the probability
distribution of the genotype of a putative QTL at a given genomic position,
conditional on all observed marker phenotypes in the region with dominant
and missing marker information for an individual. The algorithm is implemented
for various populations stemming from two inbred lines in the context of
mapping QTL. Simulation results show that if only a proportion of markers
contain missing or dominant phenotypes, QTL mapping can be almost as efficient
as if there were no missing information in the data. The efficiency of
the analysis, however, may decrease substantially when a very large proportion
of markers contain missing or dominant phenotypes and a genetic map has
to be reconstructed first on the same data as well. So it is important
to combine dominant markers with codominant markers in a QTL mapping study.