Identification of unique ROH regions with unfavorable effects on production and fertility traits in Canadian Holsteins

Archive ouverte

Makanjuola, Bayode O. | Maltecca, Christian | Miglior, Filippo | Marras, Gabriele | Abdalla, Emhimad A. | Schenkel, Flavio S. | Baes, Christine F.

Edité par CCSD ; BioMed Central -

International audience. AbstractBackgroundThe advent of genomic information and the reduction in the cost of genotyping have led to the use of genomic information to estimate genomic inbreeding as an alternative to pedigree inbreeding. Using genomic measures, effects of genomic inbreeding on production and fertility traits have been observed. However, there have been limited studies on the specific genomic regions causing the observed negative association with the trait of interest. Our aim was to identify unique run of homozygosity (ROH) genotypes present within a given genomic window that display negative associations with production and fertility traits and to quantify the effects of these identified ROH genotypes.MethodsIn total, 50,575 genotypes based on a 50K single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array and 259,871 pedigree records were available. Of these 50,575 genotypes, 46,430 cows with phenotypic records for production and fertility traits and having a first calving date between 2008 and 2018 were available. Unique ROH genotypes identified using a sliding-window approach were fitted into an animal mixed model as fixed effects to determine their effect on production and fertility traits.ResultsIn total, 133 and 34 unique ROH genotypes with unfavorable effects were identified for production and fertility traits, respectively, at a 1% genome-wise false discovery rate. Most of these ROH regions were located on bovine chromosomes 8, 13, 14 and 19 for both production and fertility traits. For production traits, the average of all the unfavorably identified unique ROH genotypes effects were estimated to decrease milk yield by 247.30 kg, fat yield by 11.46 kg and protein yield by 8.11 kg. Similarly, for fertility traits, an average 4.81-day extension in first service to conception, a 0.16 increase in number of services, and a − 0.07 incidence in 56-day non-return rate were observed. Furthermore, a ROH region located on bovine chromosome 19 was identified that, when homozygous, had a negative effect on production traits. Signatures of selection proximate to this region have implicated GH1 as a potential candidate gene, which encodes the growth hormone that binds the growth hormone receptor. This observed negative effect could be a consequence of unfavorable alleles in linkage disequilibrium with favorable alleles.ConclusionsROH genotypes with unfavorable effects on production and fertility traits were identified within and across multiple traits on most chromosomes. These identified ROH genotypes could be included in mate selection programs to minimize their frequency in future generations.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Estimation of genetic parameters for mid-infrared–predicted lactoferrin and milk fat globule size in Holstein cattle

Archive ouverte | Nayeri, Shadi | CCSD

International audience. Lactoferrin (LF) and milk fat globule (MFG) are 2 biologically active components of milk with great economical and nutritional value in the dairy industry. The objectives of this study were t...

Sharing of either phenotypes or genetic variants can increase the accuracy of genomic prediction of feed efficiency

Archive ouverte | Bolormaa, Sunduimijid | CCSD

International audience. AbstractBackgroundSharing individual phenotype and genotype data between countries is complex and fraught with potential errors, while sharing summary statistics of genome-wide association st...

Accuracy of breeding values for production traits in turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo) using recursive models with or without genomics

Archive ouverte | Abdalla, Emhimad A. | CCSD

International audience. Background: Knowledge about potential functional relationships among traits of interest offers a unique opportunity to understand causal mechanisms and to optimize breeding goals, management ...

Chargement des enrichissements...