4.4 Article

Genomic imprinting variances of beef carcass traits and physiochemical characteristics in Japanese Black cattle

Journal

ANIMAL SCIENCE JOURNAL
Volume 92, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/asj.13504

Keywords

carcass trait; fatty acid composition; genomic imprinting; glycogen; Japanese Black cattle

Funding

  1. Japan Association for Livestock New Technology

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This study aimed to estimate variance components related to imprinting for carcass traits and physiochemical characteristics in Japanese Black cattle. It found that imprinting variances were mainly due to the maternal contribution, indicating the existence of maternally expressed genomic imprinting effects on the traits in Japanese Black cattle. Therefore, maternal gametic effects should be considered in breeding programs.
The objective of this study was to estimate variance components related to imprinting for carcass traits and physiochemical characteristics in Japanese Black cattle. The carcass records obtained from 4,220 Japanese Black feedlot cattle included carcass weight (CW), rib eye area (REA), rib thickness, subcutaneous fat thickness, and beef marbling score (BMS), and the physiochemical characteristics were fat, moisture, glycogen per proportion of moisture content, oleic acid, and monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA). To detect gametic effects, an imprinting model was fitted. High additive heritabilities were estimated for all traits (from 0.516 for glycogen to 0.853 for fat) and were reduced in Mendelian heritability. The range of the differences was from 0.002 (CW) to 0.331 (fat and moisture), and the reductions were due to their imprinting variances. The ratio of the imprinting variance to the total additive genetic variance for REA (0.374), BMS (0.291), fat (0.387), moisture (0.388), and MUFA (0.337) were large (p < 0.05). These imprinting variances were due to the maternal contribution and suggested the existence of maternally expressed genomic imprinting effects on the traits in Japanese Black cattle. Therefore, maternal gametic effects should be considered in breeding programs for Japanese Black cattle.

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