A full-sib intercross line (FSIL) is constructed in an outcrossing
species by mating two parents and
intercrossing their progeny to form a large intercross line. For given
statistical power, a FSIL
design requires only slightly more individuals than an F2 design derived
from inbred line cross, but
6- to 10-fold fewer than a half-sib or full-sib design. Due to population-wide
linkage
disequilibrium, a FSIL is amenable to analysis by selective DNA pooling.
In addition, a FSIL is
maintained by continued intercrossing so that DNA samples and phenotypic
information are
accumulated across generations. Continued intercrossing also leads to map
expansion and thus to
increased mapping accuracy in the later generations. A FSIL can thus provide
a bridge to
positional cloning of quantitative trait loci (QTL) and marker-assisted
selection in outcrossers; and
is particularly effective in exploiting the QTL mapping potential of crosses
between selection lines
or phenotypically differentiated populations that differ in frequency,
but are not at fixation, for
alternative QTL alleles. In the course of the power analyses, it is shown
that for F2 and FSIL
designs, power is a function of Nd2 alone, where N
is the total size of the mapping population and
d is the standardized gene effect; while for half-sib and full-sib
populations, power is a function of
Nd2 and of the number of families included in the mapping
population. This provides a convenient
means of estimating power for a wide variety of mapping designs.