4.3 Article

A Reference Genome Assembly of Simmental Cattle, Bos taurus taurus

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEREDITY
Volume 112, Issue 2, Pages 184-191

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jhered/esab002

Keywords

Fleckvieh; bison; F1 hybrid; pangenome; nanopore; trio binning

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service [3040-31000-100-00D, 5438-32000-034-00D]
  2. University of Nebraska Great Plains Veterinary Educational Center project [2162390003]
  3. Nebraska Beef Industry Endowment [2662390323001]
  4. USDA, ARS [5090-31000-026-00D]
  5. National Institutes of Health [T32 HG008345-01]
  6. U.S. National Science Foundation [DEB-1754451]
  7. American Simmental Association

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Genomics research has increasingly acknowledged the limitation of single reference genomes and turned to pangenome representations, with the Bovine Pangenome Consortium aiming to assemble genomes from over 600 recognized cattle breeds to capture the broadest genetic diversity. This study presents a complete single haplotype assembly for a Simmental cow, a triple-purpose breed known for its fast growth and beef yields, suggesting promising continuity and completeness comparable to the best Bos taurus reference assemblies.
Genomics research has relied principally on the establishment and curation of a reference genome for the species. However, it is increasingly recognized that a single reference genome cannot fully describe the extent of genetic variation within many widely distributed species. Pangenome representations are based on high-quality genome assemblies of multiple individuals and intended to represent the broadest possible diversity within a species. A Bovine Pangenome Consortium (BPC) has recently been established to begin assembling genomes from more than 600 recognized breeds of cattle, together with other related species to provide information on ancestral alleles and haplotypes. Previously reported de novo genome assemblies for Angus, Brahman, Hereford, and Highland breeds of cattle are part of the initial BPC effort. The present report describes a complete single haplotype assembly at chromosome-scale for a fullblood Simmental cow from an F1 bison-cattle hybrid fetus by trio binning. Simmental cattle, also known as Fleckvieh due to their red and white spots, originated in central Europe in the 1830s as a triple-purpose breed selected for draught, meat, and dairy production. There are over 50 million Simmental cattle in the world, known today for their fast growth and beef yields. This assembly (ARS_Simm1.0) is similar in length to the other bovine assemblies at 2.86 Gb, with a scaffold N50 of 102 Mb (max scaffold 156.8 Mb) and meets or exceeds the continuity of the best Bos taurus reference assemblies to date.

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