Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 7 de 7
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
J Dairy Sci ; 103(7): 6276-6298, 2020 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32331891

ABSTRACT

The reliability of genomic prediction is influenced by several factors, including the size of the reference population, which makes genomic prediction for breeds with a relatively small population size challenging, such as Australian Red dairy cattle. Including other breeds in the reference population may help to increase the size of the reference population, but the reliability of genomic prediction is also influenced by the relatedness between the reference and validation population. Our objective was to optimize the reference population for genomic prediction of Australian Red dairy cattle. A reference population comprising up to 3,248 Holstein bulls, 48,386 Holstein cows, 807 Jersey bulls, 8,734 Jersey cows, and 3,041 Australian Red cows and a validation population with between 208 and 224 Australian Red Bulls were used, with records for milk, fat, and protein yield, somatic cell count, fertility, and survival. Three different analyses were implemented: single-trait genomic best linear unbiased predictor (GBLUP), multi-trait GBLUP, and single-trait Bayes R, using 2 different medium-density SNP panels: the standard 50K chip and a custom array of variants that were expected to be enriched for causative mutations. Various reference populations were constructed containing the Australian Red cows and all Holstein and Jersey bulls and cows, all Holstein and Jersey bulls, all Holstein bulls and cows, all Holstein bulls, and a subset of the Holstein individuals varying the relatedness between Holsteins and Australian Reds and the number of Holsteins. Varying the relatedness between reference and validation populations only led to small changes in reliability. Whereas adding a limited number of closely related Holsteins increased reliabilities compared with within-breed prediction, increasing the number of Holsteins decreased the reliability. The multi-trait GBLUP, which considered the same trait in different breeds as correlated traits, yielded higher reliabilities than the single-trait GBLUP. Bayes R yielded lower reliabilities than multi-trait GBLUP and outperformed single-trait GBLUP for larger reference populations. Our results show that increasing the size of a multi-breed reference population may result in a reference population dominated by one breed and reduce the reliability to predict in other breeds.


Subject(s)
Cattle/genetics , Genomics , Selective Breeding , Animals , Australia , Bayes Theorem , Cell Count , Female , Fertility/genetics , Genomics/methods , Genotype , Male , Milk/cytology , Phenotype , Reproducibility of Results
3.
Sci Rep ; 6: 34114, 2016 Sep 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27682591

ABSTRACT

Dairy products are a key source of valuable proteins and fats for many millions of people worldwide. Dairy cattle are highly susceptible to heat-stress induced decline in milk production, and as the frequency and duration of heat-stress events increases, the long term security of nutrition from dairy products is threatened. Identification of dairy cattle more tolerant of heat stress conditions would be an important progression towards breeding better adapted dairy herds to future climates. Breeding for heat tolerance could be accelerated with genomic selection, using genome wide DNA markers that predict tolerance to heat stress. Here we demonstrate the value of genomic predictions for heat tolerance in cohorts of Holstein cows predicted to be heat tolerant and heat susceptible using controlled-climate chambers simulating a moderate heatwave event. Not only was the heat challenge stimulated decline in milk production less in cows genomically predicted to be heat-tolerant, physiological indicators such as rectal and intra-vaginal temperatures had reduced increases over the 4 day heat challenge. This demonstrates that genomic selection for heat tolerance in dairy cattle is a step towards securing a valuable source of nutrition and improving animal welfare facing a future with predicted increases in heat stress events.

4.
J Anim Sci ; 94(3): 902-8, 2016 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27065252

ABSTRACT

Enteric methane emissions from beef cattle are a significant component of total greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture. The variation between beef cattle in methane emissions is partly genetic, whether measured as methane production, methane yield (methane production/DMI), or residual methane production (observed methane production - expected methane production), with heritabilities ranging from 0.19 to 0.29. This suggests methane emissions could be reduced by selection. Given the high cost of measuring methane production from individual beef cattle, genomic selection is the most feasible approach to achieve this reduction in emissions. We derived genomic EBV (GEBV) for methane traits from a reference set of 747 Angus animals phenotyped for methane traits and genotyped for 630,000 SNP. The accuracy of GEBV was tested in a validation set of 273 Angus animals phenotyped for the same traits. Accuracies of GEBV ranged from 0.29 ± 0.06 for methane yield and 0.35 ± 0.06 for residual methane production. Selection on GEBV using the genomic prediction equations derived here could reduce emissions for Angus cattle by roughly 5% over 10 yr.


Subject(s)
Breeding , Cattle/genetics , Cattle/metabolism , Genome , Methane/biosynthesis , Animals , Genomics , Genotype
5.
Anim Genet ; 47(2): 263-6, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26767563

ABSTRACT

Polyceraty (presence of multiple horns) is rare in modern day ungulates. Although not found in wild sheep, polyceraty does occur in a small number of domestic sheep breeds covering a wide geographical region. Damara are fat-tailed hair sheep, from the south-western region of Africa, which display polyceraty, with horn number ranging from zero to four. We conducted a genome-wide association study for horn number with 43 Damara genotyped with 606 006 SNP markers. The analysis revealed a region with multiple significant SNPs on ovine chromosome 2, in a location different from the mutation for polled in sheep on chromosome 10. The causal mutation for polyceraty was not identified; however, the region associated with polyceraty spans nine HOXD genes, which are critical in embryonic development of appendages. Mutations in HOXD genes are implicated in polydactly phenotypes in mice and humans. There was no evidence for epistatic interactions contributing to polyceraty. This is the first report on the genetic mechanisms underlying polyceraty in the under-studied Damara.


Subject(s)
Chromosome Mapping , Homeodomain Proteins/genetics , Horns/growth & development , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Sheep/genetics , Animals , Breeding , Female , Genetic Association Studies , Genetic Markers , Male , Phenotype , Sequence Analysis, DNA
6.
J Anim Sci ; 91(7): 3088-104, 2013 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23658330

ABSTRACT

The aim of this study was to assess the accuracy of genomic predictions for 19 traits including feed efficiency, growth, and carcass and meat quality traits in beef cattle. The 10,181 cattle in our study had real or imputed genotypes for 729,068 SNP although not all cattle were measured for all traits. Animals included Bos taurus, Brahman, composite, and crossbred animals. Genomic EBV (GEBV) were calculated using 2 methods of genomic prediction [BayesR and genomic BLUP (GBLUP)] either using a common training dataset for all breeds or using a training dataset comprising only animals of the same breed. Accuracies of GEBV were assessed using 5-fold cross-validation. The accuracy of genomic prediction varied by trait and by method. Traits with a large number of recorded and genotyped animals and with high heritability gave the greatest accuracy of GEBV. Using GBLUP, the average accuracy was 0.27 across traits and breeds, but the accuracies between breeds and between traits varied widely. When the training population was restricted to animals from the same breed as the validation population, GBLUP accuracies declined by an average of 0.04. The greatest decline in accuracy was found for the 4 composite breeds. The BayesR accuracies were greater by an average of 0.03 than GBLUP accuracies, particularly for traits with known genes of moderate to large effect mutations segregating. The accuracies of 0.43 to 0.48 for IGF-I traits were among the greatest in the study. Although accuracies are low compared with those observed in dairy cattle, genomic selection would still be beneficial for traits that are hard to improve by conventional selection, such as tenderness and residual feed intake. BayesR identified many of the same quantitative trait loci as a genomewide association study but appeared to map them more precisely. All traits appear to be highly polygenic with thousands of SNP independently associated with each trait.


Subject(s)
Breeding/methods , Cattle/physiology , Genotype , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis/methods , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Animals , Bayes Theorem , Cattle/genetics , Cattle/growth & development , Feeding Behavior , Female , Linear Models , Male , Meat/analysis , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis/veterinary , Quantitative Trait Loci , Quantitative Trait, Heritable , Species Specificity
7.
J Dairy Sci ; 95(7): 4114-29, 2012 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22720968

ABSTRACT

Achieving accurate genomic estimated breeding values for dairy cattle requires a very large reference population of genotyped and phenotyped individuals. Assembling such reference populations has been achieved for breeds such as Holstein, but is challenging for breeds with fewer individuals. An alternative is to use a multi-breed reference population, such that smaller breeds gain some advantage in accuracy of genomic estimated breeding values (GEBV) from information from larger breeds. However, this requires that marker-quantitative trait loci associations persist across breeds. Here, we assessed the gain in accuracy of GEBV in Jersey cattle as a result of using a combined Holstein and Jersey reference population, with either 39,745 or 624,213 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers. The surrogate used for accuracy was the correlation of GEBV with daughter trait deviations in a validation population. Two methods were used to predict breeding values, either a genomic BLUP (GBLUP_mod), or a new method, BayesR, which used a mixture of normal distributions as the prior for SNP effects, including one distribution that set SNP effects to zero. The GBLUP_mod method scaled both the genomic relationship matrix and the additive relationship matrix to a base at the time the breeds diverged, and regressed the genomic relationship matrix to account for sampling errors in estimating relationship coefficients due to a finite number of markers, before combining the 2 matrices. Although these modifications did result in less biased breeding values for Jerseys compared with an unmodified genomic relationship matrix, BayesR gave the highest accuracies of GEBV for the 3 traits investigated (milk yield, fat yield, and protein yield), with an average increase in accuracy compared with GBLUP_mod across the 3 traits of 0.05 for both Jerseys and Holsteins. The advantage was limited for either Jerseys or Holsteins in using 624,213 SNP rather than 39,745 SNP (0.01 for Holsteins and 0.03 for Jerseys, averaged across traits). Even this limited and nonsignificant advantage was only observed when BayesR was used. An alternative panel, which extracted the SNP in the transcribed part of the bovine genome from the 624,213 SNP panel (to give 58,532 SNP), performed better, with an increase in accuracy of 0.03 for Jerseys across traits. This panel captures much of the increased genomic content of the 624,213 SNP panel, with the advantage of a greatly reduced number of SNP effects to estimate. Taken together, using this panel, a combined breed reference and using BayesR rather than GBLUP_mod increased the accuracy of GEBV in Jerseys from 0.43 to 0.52, averaged across the 3 traits.


Subject(s)
Cattle/genetics , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis/veterinary , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/genetics , Animals , Breeding/methods , Dairying/methods , Genetic Markers/genetics , Genomics/methods , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis/standards , Quantitative Trait, Heritable
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...