Detection of haplotypes associated with prenatal death in dairy cattle and identification of deleterious mutations in GART, SHBG and SLC37A2

Archive ouverte

Fritz, Sebastien, S. | Capitan, Aurelien, A. | Djari, Anis | Rodriguez, Sabrina, S. | Barbat, Anne | Baur, Aurélia, A. | Grohs, Cécile | Weiss, Bernard, B. | Boussaha, Mekki | Esquerre, Diane, D. | Klopp, Christophe | Rocha, Dominique | Boichard, Didier

Edité par CCSD ; Public Library of Science -

Chantier qualité GA. The regular decrease of female fertility over time is a major concern in modern dairy cattle industry. Only half of this decrease is explained by indirect response to selection on milk production, suggesting the existence of other factors such as embryonic lethal genetic defects. Genomic regions harboring recessive deleterious mutations were detected in three dairy cattle breeds by identifying frequent haplotypes (.1%) showing a deficit in homozygotes among Illumina Bovine 50k Beadchip haplotyping data from the French genomic selection database (47,878 Holstein, 16,833 Montbe' liarde, and 11,466 Normande animals). Thirty-four candidate haplotypes (p,1024) including previously reported regions associated with Brachyspina, CVM, HH1, and HH3 in Holstein breed were identified. Haplotype length varied from 1 to 4.8 Mb and frequencies from 1.7 up to 9%. A significant negative effect on calving rate, consistent in heifers and in lactating cows, was observed for 9 of these haplotypes in matings between carrier bulls and daughters of carrier sires, confirming their association with embryonic lethal mutations. Eight regions were further investigated using whole genome sequencing data from heterozygous bull carriers and control animals (45 animals in total). Six strong candidate causative mutations including polymorphisms previously reported in FANCI (Brachyspina), SLC35A3 (CVM), APAF1 (HH1) and three novel mutations with very damaging effect on the protein structure, according to SIFT and Polyphen-2, were detected in GART, SHBG and SLC37A2 genes. In conclusion, this study reveals a yet hidden consequence of the important inbreeding rate observed in intensively selected and specialized cattle breeds. Counter-selection of these mutations and management of matings will have positive consequences on female fertility in dairy cattle.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Novel insights into the bovine polled phenotype and horn ontogenesis in Bovidae

Archive ouverte | Allais-Bonnet, Aurélie | CCSD

Chantier qualité GA. Despite massive research efforts, the molecular etiology of bovine polledness and the developmental pathways involved in horn ontogenesis are still poorly understood. In a recent article, we pro...

La sélection assistée par marqueurs chez les bovins laitiers. Validation des paramètres de l'évaluation génétique.

Archive ouverte | Fritz, Sebastien, S. | CCSD

Diplôme : Rapport

Identification of molecular markers of fertility in dairy cattle

Archive ouverte | Fritz, Sebastien, S. | CCSD

National audience

Chargement des enrichissements...