Ancestral alleles defined for 70 million cattle variants using a population-based likelihood ratio test

Archive ouverte

Dorji, Jigme | Reverter, Antonio | Alexandre, Pamela A. | Chamberlain, Amanda J. | Vander-Jagt, Christy J. | Kijas, James | Porto-Neto, Laercio R.

Edité par CCSD ; BioMed Central -

International audience. AbstractBackgroundThe study of ancestral alleles provides insights into the evolutionary history, selection, and genetic structures of a population. In cattle, ancestral alleles are widely used in genetic analyses, including the detection of signatures of selection, determination of breed ancestry, and identification of admixture. Having a comprehensive list of ancestral alleles is expected to improve the accuracy of these genetic analyses. However, the list of ancestral alleles in cattle, especially at the whole genome sequence level, is far from complete. In fact, the current largest list of ancestral alleles (~ 42 million) represents less than 28% of the total number of detected variants in cattle. To address this issue and develop a genomic resource for evolutionary studies, we determined ancestral alleles in cattle by comparing prior derived whole-genome sequence variants to an out-species group using a population-based likelihood ratio test.ResultsOur study determined and makes available the largest list of ancestral alleles in cattle to date (70.1 million) and includes 2.3 million on the X chromosome. There was high concordance (97.6%) of the determined ancestral alleles with those from previous studies when only high-probability ancestral alleles were considered (29.8 million positions) and another 23.5 million high-confidence ancestral alleles were novel, expanding the available reference list to improve the accuracies of genetic analyses involving ancestral alleles. The high concordance of the results with previous studies implies that our approach using genomic sequence variants and a likelihood ratio test to determine ancestral alleles is appropriate.ConclusionsConsidering the high concordance of ancestral alleles across studies, the ancestral alleles determined in this study including those not previously listed, particularly those with high-probability estimates, may be used for further genetic analyses with reasonable accuracy. Our approach that used predetermined variants in species and the likelihood ratio test to determine ancestral alleles is applicable to other species for which sequence level genotypes are available.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Selection signatures in tropical cattle are enriched for promoter and coding regions and reveal missense mutations in the damage response gene HELB

Archive ouverte | Naval-Sánchez, Marina | CCSD

International audience. AbstractBackgroundDistinct domestication events, adaptation to different climatic zones, and divergent selection in productive traits have shaped the genomic differences between taurine and i...

Mitochondrial sequence variants: testing imputation accuracy and their association with dairy cattle milk traits

Archive ouverte | Dorji, Jigme | CCSD

International audience. AbstractBackgroundMitochondrial genomes differ from the nuclear genome and in humans it is known that mitochondrial variants contribute to genetic disorders. Prior to genomics, some livestock...

Estimating the genetic merit of sires by using pooled DNA from progeny of undetermined pedigree

Archive ouverte | Bell, Amy M. | CCSD

International audience. AbstractBackgroundDNA-based predictions for hard-to-measure production traits hold great promise for selective breeding programs. DNA pooling might provide a cheap genomic approach to use phe...

Chargement des enrichissements...