4.5 Article

Fine mapping of a calving QTL on Bos taurus autosome 18 in Holstein cattle

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL BREEDING AND GENETICS
Volume 133, Issue 3, Pages 207-218

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jbg.12187

Keywords

calving; genome-wide association; Holstein; next-generation sequencing

Funding

  1. Erasmus-Mundus fellowship within the framework of the European Graduate School in Animal Breeding and Genetics
  2. Genomic Selection, Cattle
  3. Mistra Biotech project

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Decreased calving performance not only directly impacts the economic efficiency of dairy cattle farming but also influences public concern for animal welfare. Previous studies have revealed a QTL on Bos taurus autosome (BTA) 18 that has a large effect on calving traits in Holstein cattle. In this study, fine mapping of this QTL was performed using imputed high-density SNP chip (HD) genotypes followed by imputed next-generation sequencing (NGS) variants. BTA18 was scanned for seven direct calving traits in 6113 bulls with imputed HD genotypes. SNP rs136283363 (BTA18: 57 548 213) was consistently the most significantly associated SNP across all seven traits [e.g. p-value = 2.04 9 10(-59) for birth index (BI)]. To finely map the QTL region and to explore pleiotropic effects, we studied NGS variants within the targeted region (BTA18: 57 321 45057 625 355) for associations with direct calving traits and with three conformation traits. Significant variants were prioritized, and their biological relevance to the traits was interpreted. Considering their functional relationships with direct calving traits, SIGLEC12, CD33 and CEACAM18 were proposed as candidate genes. In addition, pleiotropic effects of this QTL region on direct calving traits and conformation traits were observed. However, the extent of linkage disequilibrium combined with the lack of complete annotation and potential errors in the Bos taurus genome assembly hampered our efforts to pinpoint the causal mutation.

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