4.5 Article

Effects of genomic selection for intramuscular fat content in breast muscle in Chinese local chickens

Journal

ANIMAL GENETICS
Volume 50, Issue 1, Pages 87-91

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/age.12744

Keywords

genomic breeding; intramuscular fat; meat quality; poultry

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31772591]
  2. Agricultural Science and Technology Innovation Program [ASTIP-IAS04, ASTIP-IAS-TS-15]
  3. National Nonprofit Institute Research Grant [2017ywf-zd-2]

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Improvements in living standards have resulted in consumers having higher expectations for chicken meat quality. This is particularly true in Asia, where there is high consumer preference for local breeds. Nothing is presently known about the effectiveness of using genomic selection (GS) strategies in chickens to genetically improve meat quality traits that cannot be measured in living potential parents. In this study, 724 Beijing-You chickens were used as a training population; all were genotyped using Illumina 60K SNP chips, and intramuscular fat content in breast muscle (IMFbr) was measured. Birds in the GS line were selected based on genomic estimated breeding values, IMFbr being the sole trait. Genetic progress in one generation was compared to that from conventional family-based selection, and both were evaluated against random-bred controls. Results showed that relative to the random-bred controls, IMF percentage was improved 9.62% using GS, comparable to the 10.38% improvement using family-based selection. We quantified the effectiveness of GS when applied to a meat quality trait with low heritability in chickens. We plan to introduce custom SNP chips, appropriate for native chicken breeds in China, to assist in applying GS in local breeding and accelerate genetic gain.

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