Exploring the potential genetic heterogeneity in the incidence of hoof and leg disorders in Austrian Fleckvieh and Braunvieh cattle
Autor: | Barbara Kosińska-Selbi, Magdalena Fraszczak, Tomasz Suchocki, Christa Egger-Danner, H. Schwarzenbacher, Joanna Szyda |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
2. Zero hunger
Genetics 0303 health sciences Linkage disequilibrium Candidate gene Fleckvieh cattle 040301 veterinary sciences Genetic heterogeneity biology.animal_breed Single-nucleotide polymorphism Context (language use) Genome-wide association study 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences Biology 0403 veterinary science 03 medical and health sciences Allelic heterogeneity 030304 developmental biology |
Popis: | BackgroundGenetic heterogeneity denotes the situation when different genetic architectures underlying diverse populations result in the same phenotype. In this study, we explore the nature of differences in the incidence of the number of hoof and leg disorders between Braunvieh and Fleckvieh cattle in the context of genetic heterogeneity between the breeds.ResultsDespite potentially higher power of testing due to twice as large sample size, none of the SNPs was significantly associated with the number of hoof and leg disorders in Fleckvieh, while 16 SNPs were significant in Braunvieh. The most promising candidate genes in Braunvieh are: CBLB on BTA01, which causes arthritis in rats; CAV2 on BTA04, which in effects mouse skeletal muscles; PTHLH on BTA05, which causes disease phenotypes related to the skeleton in humans, mice and zebrafish; SORCS2 on BTA06, which causes decreased susceptibility to injury in the mouse. Some of the significant SNPs (BTA01, BTA04, BTA05, BTA13, BTA16) reveal allelic heterogeneity – i.e. differences due to different allele frequencies between Fleckvieh and Braunvieh. Some of the significant regions (BTA01, BTA05, BTA13, BTA16) correlate to inter-breed differences in LD structure and may thus represent false-positive heterogeneity. However, positions on BTA06 (SORCS2), BTA14 and BTA24 mark Braunvieh-specific regions.ConclusionsWe hypothesise that the observed genetic heterogeneity of hoof and leg disorders is a by-product of multigenerational differential selection of the breeds – towards dairy production in the case of Braunvieh and towards beef production in the case of Fleckvieh. Based on the current data set it is no possibly to unequivocally confirm/exclude the hypothesis of genetic heterogeneity in the susceptibility to leg disorders between Fleckvieh and Braunvieh because only explore it through associations and not the causal mutations. Rationales against genetic heterogeneity comprise a limited power of detection of true associations as well as differences in the length of LD blocks and in linkage phase between breeds. On the other hand, multigenerational differential selection of the breeds and no systematic differences in LD structure between the breeds favour the heterogeneity hypothesis at some of the significant sites. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |