4.6 Article

Weighted Single-Step GWAS Identifies Genes Influencing Fillet Color in Rainbow Trout

Journal

GENES
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes13081331

Keywords

fillet color; rainbow trout; GWAS; genetic markers; genes

Funding

  1. United States Department of Agriculture, National Institute of Food and Agriculture [2014-67015-21602, 2021-67015-33388]
  2. USDA, Agricultural Research Service CRIS Project [1930-31000-010]

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The visual appearance of fish fillet is important for consumers' purchase decisions. This study used weighted, single-step GWAS to explore the genetic basis of fillet color variation in rainbow trout. Several genetic markers related to carotenoid metabolism, myoglobin homeostasis, protection against lipid oxidation, and muscle structural integrity were identified. These findings have significant implications for improving fillet color in rainbow trout.
The visual appearance of the fish fillet is a significant determinant of consumers' purchase decisions. Depending on the rainbow trout diet, a uniform bright white or reddish/pink fillet color is desirable. Factors affecting fillet color are complex, ranging from the ability of live fish to accumulate carotenoids in the muscle to preharvest environmental conditions, early postmortem muscle metabolism, and storage conditions. Identifying genetic markers of fillet color is a desirable goal but a challenging task for the aquaculture industry. This study used weighted, single-step GWAS to explore the genetic basis of fillet color variation in rainbow trout. We identified several SNP windows explaining up to 3.5%, 2.5%, and 1.6% of the additive genetic variance for fillet redness, yellowness, and whiteness, respectively. SNPs are located within genes implicated in carotenoid metabolism (beta,beta-carotene 15,15 '-dioxygenase, retinol dehydrogenase) and myoglobin homeostasis (ATP synthase subunit beta, mitochondrial (ATP5F1B)). These genes are involved in processes that influence muscle pigmentation and postmortem flesh coloration. Other identified genes are involved in the maintenance of muscle structural integrity (kelch protein 41b (klh41b), collagen alpha-1(XXVIII) chain (COL28A1), and cathepsin K (CTSK)) and protection against lipid oxidation (peroxiredoxin, superoxide dismutase 2 (SOD2), sestrin-1, Ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase-10 (USP10)). A-to-G single-nucleotide polymorphism in beta,beta-carotene 15,15 '-dioxygenase, and USP10 result in isoleucine-to-valine and proline-to-leucine non-synonymous amino acid substitutions, respectively. Our observation confirms that fillet color is a complex trait regulated by many genes involved in carotenoid metabolism, myoglobin homeostasis, protection against lipid oxidation, and maintenance of muscle structural integrity. The significant SNPs identified in this study could be prioritized via genomic selection in breeding programs to improve fillet color in rainbow trout.

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