Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Elisa Banchi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Elisa Banchi.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Development and validation of a 20K single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) whole genome genotyping array for apple (Malus × domestica Borkh).

Luca Bianco; Alessandro Cestaro; Daniel J. Sargent; Elisa Banchi; Sophia Derdak; Mario Di Guardo; Silvio Salvi; Johannes Jansen; Roberto Viola; Ivo Gut; François Laurens; David Chagné; Riccardo Velasco; Eric van de Weg; Michela Troggio

High-density SNP arrays for genome-wide assessment of allelic variation have made high resolution genetic characterization of crop germplasm feasible. A medium density array for apple, the IRSC 8K SNP array, has been successfully developed and used for screens of bi-parental populations. However, the number of robust and well-distributed markers contained on this array was not sufficient to perform genome-wide association analyses in wider germplasm sets, or Pedigree-Based Analysis at high precision, because of rapid decay of linkage disequilibrium. We describe the development of an Illumina Infinium array targeting 20K SNPs. The SNPs were predicted from re-sequencing data derived from the genomes of 13 Malus × domestica apple cultivars and one accession belonging to a crab apple species (M. micromalus). A pipeline for SNP selection was devised that avoided the pitfalls associated with the inclusion of paralogous sequence variants, supported the construction of robust multi-allelic SNP haploblocks and selected up to 11 entries within narrow genomic regions of ±5 kb, termed focal points (FPs). Broad genome coverage was attained by placing FPs at 1 cM intervals on a consensus genetic map, complementing them with FPs to enrich the ends of each of the chromosomes, and by bridging physical intervals greater than 400 Kbps. The selection also included ∼3.7K validated SNPs from the IRSC 8K array. The array has already been used in other studies where ∼15.8K SNP markers were mapped with an average of ∼6.8K SNPs per full-sib family. The newly developed array with its high density of polymorphic validated SNPs is expected to be of great utility for Pedigree-Based Analysis and Genomic Selection. It will also be a valuable tool to help dissect the genetic mechanisms controlling important fruit quality traits, and to aid the identification of marker-trait associations suitable for the application of Marker Assisted Selection in apple breeding programs.


BMC Genomics | 2012

Development of a dense SNP-based linkage map of an apple rootstock progeny using the Malus Infinium whole genome genotyping array.

Laima Antanaviciute; Felicidad Fernández-Fernández; Johannes Jansen; Elisa Banchi; Katherine M. Evans; Roberto Viola; Riccardo Velasco; Jim M. Dunwell; Michela Troggio; Daniel J. Sargent

BackgroundA whole-genome genotyping array has previously been developed for Malus using SNP data from 28 Malus genotypes. This array offers the prospect of high throughput genotyping and linkage map development for any given Malus progeny. To test the applicability of the array for mapping in diverse Malus genotypes, we applied the array to the construction of a SNP-based linkage map of an apple rootstock progeny.ResultsOf the 7,867 Malus SNP markers on the array, 1,823 (23.2%) were heterozygous in one of the two parents of the progeny, 1,007 (12.8%) were heterozygous in both parental genotypes, whilst just 2.8% of the 921 Pyrus SNPs were heterozygous. A linkage map spanning 1,282.2 cM was produced comprising 2,272 SNP markers, 306 SSR markers and the S- locus. The length of the M432 linkage map was increased by 52.7 cM with the addition of the SNP markers, whilst marker density increased from 3.8 cM/marker to 0.5 cM/marker. Just three regions in excess of 10 cM remain where no markers were mapped. We compared the positions of the mapped SNP markers on the M432 map with their predicted positions on the ‘Golden Delicious’ genome sequence. A total of 311 markers (13.7% of all mapped markers) mapped to positions that conflicted with their predicted positions on the ‘Golden Delicious’ pseudo-chromosomes, indicating the presence of paralogous genomic regions or mis-assignments of genome sequence contigs during the assembly and anchoring of the genome sequence.ConclusionsWe incorporated data for the 2,272 SNP markers onto the map of the M432 progeny and have presented the most complete and saturated map of the full 17 linkage groups of M. pumila to date. The data were generated rapidly in a high-throughput semi-automated pipeline, permitting significant savings in time and cost over linkage map construction using microsatellites. The application of the array will permit linkage maps to be developed for QTL analyses in a cost-effective manner, and the identification of SNPs that have been assigned erroneous positions on the ‘Golden Delicious’ reference sequence will assist in the continued improvement of the genome sequence assembly for that variety.


Tree Genetics & Genomes | 2013

Genetic dissection of aroma volatile compounds from the essential oil of peach fruit: QTL analysis and identification of candidate genes using dense SNP maps

Iban Eduardo; Giorgiana Chietera; Raul Pirona; Igor Pacheco; Michela Troggio; Elisa Banchi; Daniele Bassi; Laura Rossini; Alberto Vecchietti; Carlo Pozzi

Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in plants are involved in aroma and pest resistance. These compounds form a complex mixture whose composition is specific to species and often to varieties. Despite their importance as essential factors that determine peach fruit quality, understanding of molecular, genetic, and physiological mechanisms underlying aroma formation is limited. The aim of this study was the identification in peach of quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for fruit VOCs to understand their genetic basis using an F1 population of 126 seedlings deriving from the cross between “Bolero” (B) and “OroA” (O), two peach cultivars differing in their aroma profile. Dense single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and SSR maps covering the eight linkage groups of the peach genome were constructed by genotyping with the International Peach SNP Consortium peach SNP array v1, and data for 23 VOCs with high or unknown “odor activity value” were obtained by gas chromatography–mass spectrometry analysis of fruit essential oil in the years 2007 and 2008. A total of 72 QTLs were identified, most consistent in both years. QTLs were identified for the 23 VOCs studied, including three major QTLs for nonanal, linalool, and for p-menth-1-en-9-al stable in both years. Collocations between candidate genes and major QTLs were identified taking advantage of the peach genome sequence: genes encoding two putative terpene synthases and one lipoxygenase (Lox) might be involved in the biosynthesis of linalool and p-menth-1-en-9-al, and nonanal, respectively. Implications for marker-assisted selection and future research on the subject are discussed.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Whole-Genome Analysis of Diversity and SNP-Major Gene Association in Peach Germplasm.

Diego Micheletti; Maria Teresa Dettori; Sabrina Micali; Valeria Aramini; Igor Pacheco; Cassia Da Silva Linge; Stefano Foschi; Elisa Banchi; Teresa Barreneche; Bénédicte Quilot-Turion; Patrick Lambert; Thierry Pascal; Ignasi Iglesias; J. Carbó; Li-rong Wang; Ruijuan Ma; Xiongwei Li; Zhongshan Gao; Nelson Nazzicari; Michela Troggio; Daniele Bassi; Laura Rossini; Ignazio Verde; François Laurens; Pere Arús; Maria José Aranzana

Peach was domesticated in China more than four millennia ago and from there it spread world-wide. Since the middle of the last century, peach breeding programs have been very dynamic generating hundreds of new commercial varieties, however, in most cases such varieties derive from a limited collection of parental lines (founders). This is one reason for the observed low levels of variability of the commercial gene pool, implying that knowledge of the extent and distribution of genetic variability in peach is critical to allow the choice of adequate parents to confer enhanced productivity, adaptation and quality to improved varieties. With this aim we genotyped 1,580 peach accessions (including a few closely related Prunus species) maintained and phenotyped in five germplasm collections (four European and one Chinese) with the International Peach SNP Consortium 9K SNP peach array. The study of population structure revealed the subdivision of the panel in three main populations, one mainly made up of Occidental varieties from breeding programs (POP1OCB), one of Occidental landraces (POP2OCT) and the third of Oriental accessions (POP3OR). Analysis of linkage disequilibrium (LD) identified differential patterns of genome-wide LD blocks in each of the populations. Phenotypic data for seven monogenic traits were integrated in a genome-wide association study (GWAS). The significantly associated SNPs were always in the regions predicted by linkage analysis, forming haplotypes of markers. These diagnostic haplotypes could be used for marker-assisted selection (MAS) in modern breeding programs.


Horticulture research | 2015

Accuracy and responses of genomic selection on key traits in apple breeding

Hélène Muranty; Michela Troggio; Inès Ben Sadok; Mehdi Al Rifai; Annemarie Auwerkerken; Elisa Banchi; Riccardo Velasco; Piergiorgio Stevanato; W. Eric van de Weg; Mario Di Guardo; Satish Kumar; François Laurens; Marco C. A. M. Bink

The application of genomic selection in fruit tree crops is expected to enhance breeding efficiency by increasing prediction accuracy, increasing selection intensity and decreasing generation interval. The objectives of this study were to assess the accuracy of prediction and selection response in commercial apple breeding programmes for key traits. The training population comprised 977 individuals derived from 20 pedigreed full-sib families. Historic phenotypic data were available on 10 traits related to productivity and fruit external appearance and genotypic data for 7829 SNPs obtained with an Illumina 20K SNP array. From these data, a genome-wide prediction model was built and subsequently used to calculate genomic breeding values of five application full-sib families. The application families had genotypes at 364 SNPs from a dedicated 512 SNP array, and these genotypic data were extended to the high-density level by imputation. These five families were phenotyped for 1 year and their phenotypes were compared to the predicted breeding values. Accuracy of genomic prediction across the 10 traits reached a maximum value of 0.5 and had a median value of 0.19. The accuracies were strongly affected by the phenotypic distribution and heritability of traits. In the largest family, significant selection response was observed for traits with high heritability and symmetric phenotypic distribution. Traits that showed non-significant response often had reduced and skewed phenotypic variation or low heritability. Among the five application families the accuracies were uncorrelated to the degree of relatedness to the training population. The results underline the potential of genomic prediction to accelerate breeding progress in outbred fruit tree crops that still need to overcome long generation intervals and extensive phenotyping costs.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Evaluation of SNP Data from the Malus Infinium Array Identifies Challenges for Genetic Analysis of Complex Genomes of Polyploid Origin

Michela Troggio; Nada Šurbanovski; Luca Bianco; Marco Moretto; Lara Giongo; Elisa Banchi; Roberto Viola; Felicdad Fernández Fernández; Fabrizio Costa; Riccardo Velasco; Alessandro Cestaro; Daniel J. Sargent

High throughput arrays for the simultaneous genotyping of thousands of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have made the rapid genetic characterisation of plant genomes and the development of saturated linkage maps a realistic prospect for many plant species of agronomic importance. However, the correct calling of SNP genotypes in divergent polyploid genomes using array technology can be problematic due to paralogy, and to divergence in probe sequences causing changes in probe binding efficiencies. An Illumina Infinium II whole-genome genotyping array was recently developed for the cultivated apple and used to develop a molecular linkage map for an apple rootstock progeny (M432), but a large proportion of segregating SNPs were not mapped in the progeny, due to unexpected genotype clustering patterns. To investigate the causes of this unexpected clustering we performed BLAST analysis of all probe sequences against the ‘Golden Delicious’ genome sequence and discovered evidence for paralogous annealing sites and probe sequence divergence for a high proportion of probes contained on the array. Following visual re-evaluation of the genotyping data generated for 8,788 SNPs for the M432 progeny using the array, we manually re-scored genotypes at 818 loci and mapped a further 797 markers to the M432 linkage map. The newly mapped markers included the majority of those that could not be mapped previously, as well as loci that were previously scored as monomorphic, but which segregated due to divergence leading to heterozygosity in probe annealing sites. An evaluation of the 8,788 probes in a diverse collection of Malus germplasm showed that more than half the probes returned genotype clustering patterns that were difficult or impossible to interpret reliably, highlighting implications for the use of the array in genome-wide association studies.


BMC Genomics | 2017

Integrated QTL detection for key breeding traits in multiple peach progenies

José Ramón Hernández Mora; Diego Micheletti; Marco C. A. M. Bink; Eric van de Weg; Celia M. Cantín; Nelson Nazzicari; Andrea Caprera; Maria Teresa Dettori; Sabrina Micali; Elisa Banchi; José Antonio Campoy; Elisabeth Dirlewanger; Patrick Lambert; Thierry Pascal; Michela Troggio; Daniele Bassi; Laura Rossini; Ignazio Verde; Bénédicte Quilot-Turion; François Laurens; Pere Arús; Maria José Aranzana


EUCARPIA Symposium on Fruit Breeding and Genetics | 2017

Discovering peach QTLs with multiple progeny analysis

J..R. Hernández Mora; Diego Micheletti; Marco C. A. M. Bink; W..E. Van De Weg; Daniele Bassi; Nelson Nazzicari; Andrea Caprera; Maria Teresa Dettori; Sabrina Micali; E. Dirlewanger; Patrick Lambert; Thierry Pascal; Elisa Banchi; Michela Troggio; Laura Rossini; Ignazio Verde; Bénédicte Quilot-Turion; François Laurens; Pere Arús; Maria José Aranzana


XI International Conference on Grapevine Breeding and Genetics, 2015, ISBN 9789462610767, págs. 113-121 | 2015

A first Pedigree-Based Analysis (PBA) approach for the dissection of disease resistance traits in grapevine hybrids

E. Peressotti; C. Dolzani; L. Poles; Elisa Banchi; M. Stefanini; F. Salamini; Riccardo Velasco; S. Vezzulli; S. Riaz; M.A. Walker; B.I. Reisch; W.E. Van de Weg; Marco C. A. M. Bink


Joint Congress SIBV-SIGA, "Feeding the planet: plant science and breeding for the future of agriculture" | 2015

Innovative strategies towards marker-assisted (pre-)breeding for disease resistance in grapevine

E. Peressotti; C. Dolzani; Elisa Banchi; L. Poles; D. Buonassisi; D. Migliaro; E. Arrigoni; A. Vecchione; L. Zulini; W.E. van de Weg; Marco C. A. M. Bink; M. Stefanini; R. Velasco; S. Vezzulli

Collaboration


Dive into the Elisa Banchi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

François Laurens

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marco C. A. M. Bink

Wageningen University and Research Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Diego Micheletti

Spanish National Research Council

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Maria José Aranzana

Spanish National Research Council

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pere Arús

Spanish National Research Council

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patrick Lambert

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thierry Pascal

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge