Torbert Rocheford
Purdue University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Torbert Rocheford.
Nature Genetics | 2011
Feng Tian; Peter J. Bradbury; Patrick J. Brown; Hsiaoyi Hung; Qi Sun; Sherry Flint-Garcia; Torbert Rocheford; Michael D. McMullen; James B. Holland; Edward S. Buckler
US maize yield has increased eight-fold in the past 80 years, with half of the gain attributed to selection by breeders. During this time, changes in maize leaf angle and size have altered plant architecture, allowing more efficient light capture as planting density has increased. Through a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of the maize nested association mapping panel, we determined the genetic basis of important leaf architecture traits and identified some of the key genes. Overall, we demonstrate that the genetic architecture of the leaf traits is dominated by small effects, with little epistasis, environmental interaction or pleiotropy. In particular, GWAS results show that variations at the liguleless genes have contributed to more upright leaves. These results demonstrate that the use of GWAS with specially designed mapping populations is effective in uncovering the basis of key agronomic traits.
Nature Genetics | 2010
Jianbing Yan; Catherine B. Kandianis; Carlos Harjes; Ling Bai; Eun Ha Kim; Xiaohong Yang; Debra J. Skinner; Zhiyuan Fu; Sharon E. Mitchell; Qing Li; Maria G. Salas Fernandez; Maria Zaharieva; Raman Babu; Yang Fu; Natalia Palacios; Jiansheng Li; Dean DellaPenna; Thomas P. Brutnell; Edward S. Buckler; Marilyn L. Warburton; Torbert Rocheford
Breeding to increase β-carotene levels in cereal grains, termed provitamin A biofortification, is an economical approach to address dietary vitamin A deficiency in the developing world. Experimental evidence from association and linkage populations in maize (Zea mays L.) demonstrate that the gene encoding β-carotene hydroxylase 1 (crtRB1) underlies a principal quantitative trait locus associated with β-carotene concentration and conversion in maize kernels. crtRB1 alleles associated with reduced transcript expression correlate with higher β-carotene concentrations. Genetic variation at crtRB1 also affects hydroxylation efficiency among encoded allozymes, as observed by resultant carotenoid profiles in recombinant expression assays. The most favorable crtRB1 alleles, rare in frequency and unique to temperate germplasm, are being introgressed via inexpensive PCR marker-assisted selection into tropical maize germplasm adapted to developing countries, where it is most needed for human health.
PLOS Genetics | 2011
Patrick J. Brown; Narasimham Upadyayula; Gregory S. Mahone; Feng Tian; Peter J. Bradbury; Sean Myles; James B. Holland; Sherry Flint-Garcia; Michael D. McMullen; Edward S. Buckler; Torbert Rocheford
We compared the genetic architecture of thirteen maize morphological traits in a large population of recombinant inbred lines. Four traits from the male inflorescence (tassel) and three traits from the female inflorescence (ear) were measured and studied using linkage and genome-wide association analyses and compared to three flowering and three leaf traits previously studied in the same population. Inflorescence loci have larger effects than flowering and leaf loci, and ear effects are larger than tassel effects. Ear trait models also have lower predictive ability than tassel, flowering, or leaf trait models. Pleiotropic loci were identified that control elongation of ear and tassel, consistent with their common developmental origin. For these pleiotropic loci, the ear effects are larger than tassel effects even though the same causal polymorphisms are likely involved. This implies that the observed differences in genetic architecture are not due to distinct features of the underlying polymorphisms. Our results support the hypothesis that genetic architecture is a function of trait stability over evolutionary time, since the traits that changed most during the relatively recent domestication of maize have the largest effects.
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2010
Xiaohong Yang; Yuqiu Guo; Jianbing Yan; Jun Zhang; Tongming Song; Torbert Rocheford; Jiansheng Li
High-oil maize is a useful genetic resource for genomic investigation in plants. To determine the genetic basis of oil concentration and composition in maize grain, a recombinant inbred population derived from a cross between normal line B73 and high-oil line By804 was phenotyped using gas chromatography, and genotyped with 228 molecular markers. A total of 42 individual QTL, associated with fatty acid compositions and oil concentration, were detected in 21 genomic regions. Five major QTL were identified for measured traits, one each of which explained 42.0% of phenotypic variance for palmitic acid, 15.0% for stearic acid, 27.7% for oleic acid, 48.3% for linoleic acid, and 15.7% for oil concentration in the RIL population. Thirty-six loci were involved in 24 molecular marker pairs of epistatic interactions across all traits, which explained phenotypic variances ranging from 0.4 to 6.1%. Seven of 18 mapping candidate genes related to lipid metabolism were localized within or were close to identified individual QTL, explaining 0.7–13.2% of the population variance. These results demonstrated that a few major QTL with large additive effects could play an important role in attending fatty acid compositions and increasing oil concentration in used germplasm. A larger number of minor QTL and a certain number of epistatic QTL, both with additive effects, also contributed to fatty acid compositions and oil concentration.
G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics | 2013
Alexander E. Lipka; Michael A. Gore; Maria Magallanes-Lundback; Alex Mesberg; Haining Lin; Tyler Tiede; harles Chen; C. Robin Buell; Edward S. Buckler; Torbert Rocheford; Dean DellaPenna
Tocopherols and tocotrienols, collectively known as tocochromanols, are the major lipid-soluble antioxidants in maize (Zea mays L.) grain. Given that individual tocochromanols differ in their degree of vitamin E activity, variation for tocochromanol composition and content in grain from among diverse maize inbred lines has important nutritional and health implications for enhancing the vitamin E and antioxidant contents of maize-derived foods through plant breeding. Toward this end, we conducted a genome-wide association study of six tocochromanol compounds and 14 of their sums, ratios, and proportions with a 281 maize inbred association panel that was genotyped for 591,822 SNP markers. In addition to providing further insight into the association between ZmVTE4 (γ-tocopherol methyltransferase) haplotypes and α-tocopherol content, we also detected a novel association between ZmVTE1 (tocopherol cyclase) and tocotrienol composition. In a pathway-level analysis, we assessed the genetic contribution of 60 a priori candidate genes encoding the core tocochromanol pathway (VTE genes) and reactions for pathways supplying the isoprenoid tail and aromatic head group of tocochromanols. This analysis identified two additional genes, ZmHGGT1 (homogentisate geranylgeranyltransferase) and one prephenate dehydratase parolog (of four in the genome) that also modestly contribute to tocotrienol variation in the panel. Collectively, our results provide the most favorable ZmVTE4 haplotype and suggest three new gene targets for increasing vitamin E and antioxidant levels through marker-assisted selection.
Heredity | 2012
H-Y Hung; C Browne; Katherine Guill; Nathan D. Coles; Magen S. Eller; A Garcia; N Lepak; S Melia-Hancock; Marco Oropeza-Rosas; S Salvo; Narasimham Upadyayula; Edward S. Buckler; Sherry Flint-Garcia; Michael D. McMullen; Torbert Rocheford; James B. Holland
Appropriate selection of parents for the development of mapping populations is pivotal to maximizing the power of quantitative trait loci detection. Trait genotypic variation within a family is indicative of the familys informativeness for genetic studies. Accurate prediction of the most useful parental combinations within a species would help guide quantitative genetics studies. We tested the reliability of genotypic and phenotypic distance estimators between pairs of maize inbred lines to predict genotypic variation for quantitative traits within families derived from biparental crosses. We developed 25 families composed of ∼200 random recombinant inbred lines each from crosses between a common reference parent inbred, B73, and 25 diverse maize inbreds. Parents and families were evaluated for 19 quantitative traits across up to 11 environments. Genetic distances (GDs) among parents were estimated with 44 simple sequence repeat and 2303 single-nucleotide polymorphism markers. GDs among parents had no predictive value for progeny variation, which is most likely due to the choice of neutral markers. In contrast, we observed for about half of the traits measured a positive correlation between phenotypic parental distances and within-family genetic variance estimates. Consequently, the choice of promising segregating populations can be based on selecting phenotypically diverse parents. These results are congruent with models of genetic architecture that posit numerous genes affecting quantitative traits, each segregating for allelic series, with dispersal of allelic effects across diverse genetic material. This architecture, common to many quantitative traits in maize, limits the predictive value of parental genotypic or phenotypic values on progeny variance.
Genetics | 2014
Brenda F. Owens; Alexander E. Lipka; Maria Magallanes-Lundback; Tyler Tiede; Christine H. Diepenbrock; Catherine B. Kandianis; Eunha Kim; Jason Cepela; Maria Mateos-Hernandez; C. Robin Buell; Edward S. Buckler; Dean DellaPenna; Michael A. Gore; Torbert Rocheford
Efforts are underway for development of crops with improved levels of provitamin A carotenoids to help combat dietary vitamin A deficiency. As a global staple crop with considerable variation in kernel carotenoid composition, maize (Zea mays L.) could have a widespread impact. We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of quantified seed carotenoids across a panel of maize inbreds ranging from light yellow to dark orange in grain color to identify some of the key genes controlling maize grain carotenoid composition. Significant associations at the genome-wide level were detected within the coding regions of zep1 and lut1, carotenoid biosynthetic genes not previously shown to impact grain carotenoid composition in association studies, as well as within previously associated lcyE and crtRB1 genes. We leveraged existing biochemical and genomic information to identify 58 a priori candidate genes relevant to the biosynthesis and retention of carotenoids in maize to test in a pathway-level analysis. This revealed dxs2 and lut5, genes not previously associated with kernel carotenoids. In genomic prediction models, use of markers that targeted a small set of quantitative trait loci associated with carotenoid levels in prior linkage studies were as effective as genome-wide markers for predicting carotenoid traits. Based on GWAS, pathway-level analysis, and genomic prediction studies, we outline a flexible strategy involving use of a small number of genes that can be selected for rapid conversion of elite white grain germplasm, with minimal amounts of carotenoids, to orange grain versions containing high levels of provitamin A.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2016
Darwin Ortiz; Torbert Rocheford; Mario G. Ferruzzi
Maize is a staple crop that has been the subject of biofortification efforts to increase the natural content of provitamin A carotenoids. Although significant progress toward increasing provitamin A carotenoid content in maize varieties has been made, postharvest handling factors that influence carotenoid stability during storage have not been fully established. The objectives of this study were to determine carotenoid profiles of six selected provitamin A biofortified maize genotypes at various developmental stages and assess the stability of carotenoids in maize kernels during controlled storage conditions (12 month period), including elevated temperature and relative humidity. There were no significant changes in the content of individual carotenoids within genotypes during kernel development from 45 days after pollination through the time of harvest. Carotenoid losses through traditional grain drying were also minimal (<9%). However, the stability of carotenoids in maize kernels over storage time after harvest was found to be dependent on both temperature and humidity, with variation observed among genotypes. Different forms of provitamin A carotenoids follow similar degradation rates. The genotype C17xDE3 had a degradation rate 2 times faster than those of the other genotypes evaluated (P < 0.001). These differences in carotenoid stability under controlled storage were attributed, in part, to observed differences in the physical properties of the kernels (surface area and porosity). These results support the notion that effective control of moisture content and temperature of the kernels during storage conditions is essential to reduce the speed of degradative reactions.
Journal of Nutrition | 2013
Emily Heying; Michael Grahn; Kevin V. Pixley; Torbert Rocheford; Sherry A. Tanumihardjo
The relationship of dietary vitamin A transfer from mother to fetus is not well understood. The difference in swine offspring liver reserves was investigated between single-dose vitamin A provided to the mother post-conception compared with continuous provitamin A carotenoid dietary intake from biofortified (enhanced provitamin A) orange maize (OM) fed during gestation and lactation. Vitamin A-depleted sows were fed OM (n = 5) or white maize (WM) + 1.05 mmol retinyl palmitate administered at the beginning of gestation (n = 6). Piglets (n = 102) were killed at 0, 10, 20, and 28 d after birth. Piglets from sows fed OM had higher liver retinol reserves (P < 0.0001) and a combined mean concentration from d 10 to 28 of 0.11 ± 0.030 μmol/g. Piglets from sows fed WM had higher serum retinol concentrations (0.56 ± 0.25 μmol/L; P = 0.0098) despite lower liver retinol concentrations of 0.068 ± 0.026 μmol/g from d 10 to 28. Milk was collected at 0, 5, 10, 20, and 28 d. Sows fed OM had a higher milk retinol concentration (1.36 ± 1.30 μmol/L; P = 0.038), than those fed WM (0.93 ±1.03 μmol/L). Sow livers were collected at the end of the study (n = 3/group) and had identical retinol concentrations (0.22 ± 0.05 μmol/g). Consumption of daily provitamin A carotenoids by sows during gestation and lactation increased liver retinol status in weanling piglets, illustrating the potential for provitamin A carotenoid consumption from biofortified staple foods to improve vitamin A reserves. Biofortified OM could have a measurable impact on vitamin A status in deficient populations if widely adopted.
Euphytica | 2012
Eunsoo Choe; Torbert Rocheford
Pericarp thickness and ear traits are important selection criteria for breeding fresh market waxy corn. This research was conducted to better understand genetic control of these traits in popular South Korean germplasm now grown in Illinois. Pericarp thickness on five kernel regions, and ten inflorescence architecture traits were measured on ears from 264 F2:3 families from a cross between Korean inbreds BH20 and BH30. All five pericarp thickness traits showed high heritabilities and were highly correlated. Multivariate principal components analysis (PCA) revealed that just one principal component (PC) explained most of the total phenotypic variation. A number of univariate quantitative trait loci (QTL) were detected and most were associated with more than one kernel pericarp region. Four out of seven PC-QTL were located in chromosome positions where three or more pericarp thickness univariate QTL were detected. Conversely, three PC-QTL were found in regions with just a single or two univariate QTL, indicating that these QTL regions may be more important for overall pericarp thickness than suggested by univariate analysis. The PCA, QTL, and PC-QTL results indicate that pericarp thickness on different kernel regions may be controlled by common genes with pleiotropic effects. Additive effects of QTL for thinner pericarp thickness came from both BH20 and BH30. For ear architecture traits, heritability varied from 0.38 to 0.72, and several traits were correlated. The PCA reduced these traits into three independent PCs, and all substantial component traits for these PCs were also significantly correlated. A number of univariate QTL were clustered closely, and some PC-QTL were detected in these regions. Some PC-QTL were found in chromosome regions where univariate QTL were not detected, again suggesting that these regions may have larger overall effects on ear architecture than suggested by univariate analyses. Collectively, these QTL may be useful for marker assisted introgression into germplasm more adapted to the U.S.