4.6 Article

Single-Step Genomic Prediction of Superovulatory Response Traits in Japanese Black Donor Cows

Journal

BIOLOGY-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biology12050718

Keywords

Japanese Black cattle; superovulatory response trait; pedigree; single-nucleotide polymorphism; single-step genomic prediction

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We evaluated the performance of single-step genomic prediction for breeding values of superovulatory response traits in Japanese Black donor cows. Records of 25,332 embryos and oocytes and genotype information on 36,426 SNPs were collected. The estimated heritabilities and genetic correlations differed when using pedigree information versus a combination of pedigree and SNP marker genotype information. Using the single-step genomic prediction showed potential for improving the rate of genetic improvement, but it is important to maintain genetic diversity during selection.
We assessed the performance of single-step genomic prediction of breeding values for superovulatory response traits in Japanese Black donor cows. A total of 25,332 records of the total number of embryos and oocytes (TNE) and the number of good embryos (NGE) per flush for 1874 Japanese Black donor cows were collected during 2008 and 2022. Genotype information on 36,426 autosomal single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for 575 out of the 1,874 cows was used. Breeding values were predicted exploiting a two-trait repeatability animal model. Two genetic relationship matrices were used, one based on pedigree information (A matrix) and the other considering both pedigree and SNP marker genotype information (H matrix). Estimated heritabilities of TNE and NGE were 0.18 and 0.11, respectively, when using the H matrix, which were both slightly lower than when using the A matrix (0.26 for TNE and 0.16 for NGE). Estimated genetic correlations between the traits were 0.61 and 0.66 when using H and A matrices, respectively. When the variance components were the same in breeding value prediction, the mean reliability was greater when using the H matrix than when using the A matrix. This advantage seems more prominent for cows with low reliability when using the A matrix. The results imply that introducing single-step genomic prediction could boost the rate of genetic improvement of superovulatory response traits, but efforts should be made to maintain genetic diversity when performing selection.

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