4.5 Article

Genome-wide association analysis for quantitative trait loci influencing Warner-Bratzler shear force in five taurine cattle breeds

Journal

ANIMAL GENETICS
Volume 43, Issue 6, Pages 662-673

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.2012.02323.x

Keywords

beef; Bos taurus taurus; calpain 1; (mu; I) large subunit; calpastatin; genome-wide association; haplotype; meat tenderness; quantitative trait loci; single-nucleotide polymorphisms; Warner-Bratzler shear force

Funding

  1. University of Missouri
  2. Missouri Beef Industry Council
  3. National Research Initiative from the USDA Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service [2008-35205-04687, 2008-35205-18864]
  4. USDA Agriculture and Food Research Initiative [2009-65205-05635]
  5. NIFA [2009-65205-05635, 581822] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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We performed a genome-wide association study for WarnerBratzler shear force (WBSF), a measure of meat tenderness, by genotyping 3360 animals from five breeds with 54 790 BovineSNP50 and 96 putative single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within mu-calpain [HUGO nomenclature calpain 1, (mu/I) large subunit; CAPN1] and calpastatin (CAST). Within- and across-breed analyses estimated SNP allele substitution effects (ASEs) by genomic best linear unbiased prediction (GBLUP) and variance components by restricted maximum likelihood under an animal model incorporating a genomic relationship matrix. GBLUP estimates of ASEs from the across-breed analysis were moderately correlated (0.310.66) with those from the individual within-breed analyses, indicating that prediction equations for molecular estimates of breeding value developed from across-breed analyses should be effective for genomic selection within breeds. We identified 79 genomic regions associated with WBSF in at least three breeds, but only eight were detected in all five breeds, suggesting that the within-breed analyses were underpowered, that different quantitative trait loci (QTL) underlie variation between breeds or that the BovineSNP50 SNP density is insufficient to detect common QTL among breeds. In the across-breed analysis, CAPN1 was followed by CAST as the most strongly associated WBSF QTL genome-wide, and associations with both were detected in all five breeds. We show that none of the four commercialized CAST and CAPN1 SNP diagnostics are causal for associations with WBSF, and we putatively fine-map the CAPN1 causal mutation to a 4581-bp region. We estimate that variation in CAST and CAPN1 explains 1.02 and 1.85% of the phenotypic variation in WBSF respectively.

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