4.5 Article

Improving the resolution of canine genome-wide association studies using genotype imputation: A study of two breeds

Journal

ANIMAL GENETICS
Volume 52, Issue 5, Pages 703-713

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/age.13117

Keywords

Border Collie; genome-wide association study; imputation accuracy; Italian Spinone; whole genome sequencing

Funding

  1. Petplan Charitable Trust [S18-688-726]
  2. Italian Spinone Club of Great Britain
  3. Kennel Club Charitable Trust
  4. Wellcome Trust [203141/Z/16/Z, 090532/Z/09/Z]
  5. MRC Hub grant [G090074791070]

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Genotype imputation using a reference panel combining high-density array data with publicly available whole genome sequence consortium variant data is shown to be an effective and accurate method to increase the density of lower-density array datasets in dogs. The study demonstrates high accuracy in imputation, utilizing reference panels consisting of breed-specific array data and multi-breed variant data. The findings provide evidence and support for the efficacy of this approach in canine genetics.
Genotype imputation using a reference panel that combines high-density array data and publicly available whole genome sequence consortium variant data is potentially a cost-effective method to increase the density of extant lower-density array datasets. In this study, three datasets (two Border Collie; one Italian Spinone) generated using a legacy array (Illumina CanineHD, 173 662 SNPs) were utilised to assess the feasibility and accuracy of this approach and to gather additional evidence for the efficacy of canine genotype imputation. The cosmopolitan reference panels used to impute genotypes comprised dogs of 158 breeds, mixed breed dogs, wolves and Chinese indigenous dogs, as well as breed-specific individuals genotyped using the Axiom Canine HD array. The two Border Collie reference panels comprised 808 individuals including 79 Border Collies and 426 326 or 426 332 SNPs; and the Italian Spinone reference panel comprised 807 individuals including 38 Italian Spinoni and 476 313 SNPs. A high accuracy for imputation was observed, with the lowest accuracy observed for one of the Border Collie datasets (mean R-2 = 0.94) and the highest for the Italian Spinone dataset (mean R-2 = 0.97). This study's findings demonstrate that imputation of a legacy array study set using a reference panel comprising both breed-specific array data and multi-breed variant data derived from whole genomes is effective and accurate. The process of canine genotype imputation, using the valuable growing resource of publicly available canine genome variant datasets alongside breed-specific data, is described in detail to facilitate and encourage use of this technique in canine genetics.

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