4.6 Article

Comparing BeadChip and WGS Genotyping: Non-Technical Failed Calling Is Attributable to Additional Variation within the Probe Target Sequence

Journal

GENES
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes13030485

Keywords

genomic evaluation; genotyping platforms; single nucleotide polymorphism

Funding

  1. Israel Milk Marketing Board [362-0691]
  2. Israel Science Foundation [946/19]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study compared the genotyping accuracy between microarray-based techniques and whole-genome sequencing (WGS) in 17 Israeli Holstein bulls. The findings revealed systematic differences between microarray-based genotyping and WGS genotyping, which could introduce errors. The study suggests that microarray design should avoid polymorphic genomic regions prone to extra variation and that WGS data may be used to resolve genotyping errors.
Microarray-based genomic selection is a central tool to increase the genetic gain of economically significant traits in dairy cattle. Yet, the effectivity of this tool is slightly limited, as estimates based on genotype data only partially explain the observed heritability. In the analysis of the genomes of 17 Israeli Holstein bulls, we compared genotyping accuracy between whole-genome sequencing (WGS) and microarray-based techniques. Using the standard GATK pipeline, the short-variant discovery within sequence reads mapped to the reference genome (ARS-UCD1.2) was compared to the genotypes from Illumina BovineSNP50 BeadChip and to an alternative method, which computationally mimics the hybridization procedure by mapping reads to 50 bp spanning the BeadChip source sequences. The number of mismatches between the BeadChip and WGS genotypes was low (0.2%). However, 17,197 (40% of the informative SNPs) had extra variation within 50 bp of the targeted SNP site, which might interfere with hybridization-based genotyping. Consequently, with respect to genotyping errors, BeadChip varied significantly and systematically from WGS genotyping, introducing null allele-like effects and Mendelian errors (<0.5%), whereas the GATK algorithm of local de novo assembly of haplotypes successfully resolved the genotypes in the extra-variable regions. These findings suggest that the microarray design should avoid polymorphic genomic regions that are prone to extra variation and that WGS data may be used to resolve erroneous genotyping, which may partially explain missing heritability.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available