SNP panels for the estimation of dairy breed proportion and parentage assignment in African crossbred dairy cattle

Archive ouverte

Gebrehiwot, Netsanet Z. | Strucken, Eva M. | Marshall, Karen | Aliloo, Hassan | Gibson, John P.

Edité par CCSD ; BioMed Central -

International audience. Background: Understanding the relationship between genetic admixture and phenotypic performance is crucial for the optimization of crossbreeding programs. The use of small sets of informative ancestry markers can be a cost-effective option for the estimation of breed composition and for parentage assignment in situations where pedigree recording is difficult. The objectives of this study were to develop small single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) panels that can accurately estimate the total dairy proportion and assign parentage in both West and East African crossbred dairy cows.Methods: Medium- and high-density SNP genotype data (Illumina BovineSNP50 and BovineHD Beadchip) for 4231 animals sampled from African crossbreds, African Bos taurus, European Bos taurus, Bos indicus, and African indigenous populations were used. For estimating breed composition, the absolute differences in allele frequency were calculated between pure ancestral breeds to identify SNPs with the highest discriminating power, and different combinations of SNPs weighted by ancestral origin were tested against estimates based on all available SNPs. For parentage assignment, informative SNPs were selected based on the highest minor allele frequency (MAF) in African crossbred populations assuming two Scenarios: (1) parents were selected among all the animals with known genotypes, and (2) parents were selected only among the animals known to be a parent of at least one progeny.ResultsFor the medium-density genotype data, SNPs selected for the largest differences in allele frequency between West African indigenous and European Bos taurus breeds performed best for most African crossbred populations and achieved a prediction accuracy (r2) for breed composition of 0.926 to 0.961 with 200 SNPs. For the high-density dataset, a panel with 70% of the SNPs selected on their largest difference in allele frequency between African and European Bos taurus performed best or very near best across all crossbred populations with r2 ranging from 0.978 to 0.984 with 200 SNPs. In all African crossbred populations, unambiguous parentage assignment was possible with ≥ 300 SNPs for the majority of the panels for Scenario 1 and ≥ 200 SNPs for Scenario 2.Conclusions: The identified low-cost SNP assays could overcome incomplete or inaccurate pedigree records in African smallholder systems and allow effective breeding decisions to produce progeny of desired breed composition.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Genetic diversity and effective population sizes of thirteen Indian cattle breeds

Archive ouverte | Strucken, Eva M. | CCSD

International audience. AbstractBackgroundThe genetic structure of a diverse set of 15 Indian indigenous breeds and non-descript indigenous cattle sampled from eight states was examined, based on 777 k single nucleo...

Genetic tests for estimating dairy breed proportion and parentage assignment in East African crossbred cattle

Archive ouverte | Strucken, Eva M. | CCSD

International audience. AbstractBackgroundSmallholder dairy farming in much of the developing world is based on the use of crossbred cows that combine local adaptation traits of indigenous breeds with high milk yiel...

Assessment of genotyping array performance for genome-wide association studies and imputation in African cattle

Archive ouverte | Riggio, Valentina | CCSD

International audience. AbstractBackgroundIn cattle, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have largely focused on European or Asian breeds, using genotyping arrays that were primarily designed for European cattle....

Chargement des enrichissements...