4.7 Article

Genetic analysis of groups of mid-infrared predicted fatty acids in milk

Journal

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
Volume 100, Issue 6, Pages 4731-4744

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2016-12244

Keywords

milk fatty acid; mid-infrared; random regression model; heritability

Funding

  1. DairyGen council of Canadian Dairy Network (Guelph, Ontario, Canada)
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (Ottawa, Ontario, Canada)
  3. Dairy Research Cluster Initiative (Dairy Farmers of Canada)
  4. Dairy Research Cluster Initiative (Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada)
  5. Dairy Research Cluster Initiative (Canadian Dairy Network)
  6. Dairy Research Cluster Initiative (Canadian Dairy Commission)
  7. FOSS (HiHerod, Denmark)

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The objective of this study was to investigate genetic variability of mid-infrared predicted fatty acid groups in Canadian Holstein cattle. Genetic parameters were estimated for 5 groups of fatty acids: short-chain (4 to 10 carbons), medium-chain (11 to 16 carbons), long-chain (17 to 22 carbons), saturated, and unsaturated fatty acids. The data set included 49,127 test-day records from 10,029 first-lactation Holstein cows in 810 herds. The random regression animal test-day model included days in milk, herd-test date, and age-season of calving (polynomial regression) as fixed effects, herd-year of calving, animal additive genetic effect, and permanent environment effects as random polynomial regressions, and random residual effect. Legendre polynomials of the third degree were selected for the fixed regression for age-season of calving effect and Legendre polynomials of the fourth degree were selected for the random regression for animal additive genetic, permanent environment, and herd-year effect. The average daily heritability over the lactation for the medium-chain fatty acid group (0.32) was higher than for the short chain (0.24) and long-chain (0.23) fatty acid groups. The average daily heritability for the saturated fatty acid group (0.33) was greater than for the unsaturated fatty acid group (0.21). Estimated average daily genetic correlations were positive among all fatty acid groups and ranged from moderate to high (0.63-0.96). The genetic correlations illustrated similarities and differences in their origin and the makeup of the groupings based on chain length and saturation. These results provide evidence for the existence of genetic variation in mid infrared predicted fatty acid groups, and the possibility of improving milk fatty acid profile through genetic selection in Canadian dairy cattle.

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