Genetical genomics reveals large scale genotype-by-environment interactions in Arabisopsis thaliana

Publication date

2013

Authors

Snoek, BastenISNI 0000000419527486
Terpstra, I.R.ISNI 0000000388061061
Dekter, R.
van den Ackerveken, GuidoORCID 0000-0002-0183-8978ISNI 0000000446388098
Peeters, TonISNI 0000000138998425

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Article
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Abstract

One of the major goals of quantitative genetics is to unravel the complex interactions between molecular genetic factors and the environment.The effects of these genotype-byenvironment interactions also affect and cause variation in gene expression.The regulatory loci responsible for this variation can be found by genetical genomics that involves the mapping of quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for gene expression traits also called expression-QTL (eQTLs). Most genetical genomics experiments published so far, are performed in a single environment and hence do not allow investigation of the role of genotype-by-environment interactions. Furthermore, most studies have been done in a steady state environment leading to acclimated expression patterns. However a response to the environment or change therein can be highly plastic and possibly lead to more and larger differences between genotypes. Here we present a genetical genomics study on 120 Arabidopsis thaliana, Landsberg erecta Cape Verde Islands, recombinant inbred lines (RILs) in active response to the environment by treating them with 3 h of shade. The results of this experiment are compared to a previous study on seedlings of the same RILs from a steady state environment. The combination of two highly different conditions but exactly the same RILs with a fixed genetic variation showed the large role of genotype-by-environment interactions on gene expression levels. We found environment-dependent hotspots of transcript regulation. The major hotspot was confirmed by the expression profile of a near isogenic line. Our combined analysis leads us to propose CSN5A, a COP9 signalosome component, as a candidate regulator for the gene expression response to shade.

Keywords

genetical genomics, genotype-by-environment interaction, Arabidopsis thaliana, shade avoidance, expression-QTLs, recombinant inbred lines, International

Citation

Snoek, L B, Terpstra, I R, Dekter, R, van den Ackerveken, A F J M & Peeters, A J M 2013, 'Genetical genomics reveals large scale genotype-by-environment interactions in Arabisopsis thaliana', Frontiers in Genetics [E], vol. 3, 317. https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2012.00317