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0327 Genome-wide association study for supernumerary teats in Swiss Brown Swiss Cattle reveals LGR5 as a major gene on chromosome 5
- Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- Supernumerary teats (SNT) are any teats present on a cow`s udder other than the regular four. In Swiss Brown cows, 19.9% carry SNT. Different stages of development of SNT are observed from rudimentary appendices to functional and possibly lactating teats. SNT may promote mastatis, impeach good placement of the milking machine and lower market price of the animals. No genetic analysis of the trais has been done in this cattle population, althought SNT have been routinely recorded with other conformation traits since 1995 in Switzerland. This study aimed to investigate the genetic acrchitecture of this trait through genome-wide association studies (GWAS) performed with imputed whole-genome sequence. Two trait definitions were used: Udder Clearance (UCT) considering whether a cow is carrier of any SNT or has a clear udder and Presence of Supernumerary Mammary Gland (PMG) opposing animal carrier of completely developed and possibly functional SNT with animals with a clear udder or carrier of a rudimentary SNT. Breeding values were estimated for Brown Swiss sires of at least 20 daughters with SNT records using an animal model including the random effects expert-by-year, farm-by-year and animal. The animal's dam life stage—heifer or cow—during its parity was fitted as a fixed effect in the same model. Single SNP regression using deregressed proofs of 1519 bulls with genotypes imputed to the variant list of the 5thRun of the 1000 Bulls Genome Project permitted discovery of three important regions on BTA5, BTA17 and BTA20 associated with the presence or the development of SNT. Regions on BTA17 and BTA20 reached clearly lower p-values (10−7 vs. 10−4) when associated to PMG than UCT, while variants on BTA5 were significantly linked to both trait definitions. No candidate genes on BTA 17 and BTA20 were found after functional analysis. On BTA5, however, the leucine-rich repeat-containing G protein coupled receptor 5 (LGR5) can be considered as the major gene for our trait. Enco
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Notes :
- application/pdf, English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1204144283
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource