Abstract
Strategies for mapping quantitative trait (QT) loci (QTL) need special studies in species where inbred lines cannot easily be obtained. We propose the detection of QTL with schemes including several full-sib families and study here the efficiency of such schemes — diallel, factorial, cyclic or single-pair mating designs — for a varying number of parents, on the basis of the power of tests for QTL detection. We considered a single, fully informative marker completely linked to the QTL. The tests proposed for QTL detection are based on linear additive models. The results show that for a given number of parents, in given conditions, the mating design has no effect on power. It increases as the total number of individuals genotyped increases. The number of parents affects the power of QTL detection insofar as the effect of substituting QT alleles varies from one parent to another and as some parents can be homozygous at the QTL: with only two parents QTL detection is often less powerful than with more parents. The size of the genetic effects that can be detected with a given power decreases as the number of parents increases from two to six and is quite stable for more than six parents. If QTL heterozygote frequency in the base population is high enough (greater than 0.2) mating designs with six parents should give a good sample of variance attributable to QTL and allow the detection of QTL with reasonable power.
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