对三种奶牛杂交品种基因组互补性的评估显示,父系对生产性状的影响具有特异性,而基因组近交率却相当。

IF 3.5 2区 生物学 Q2 BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY BMC Genomics Pub Date : 2024-11-20 DOI:10.1186/s12864-024-11029-z
Dorothea Lindtke, Sylvain Lerch, Isabelle Morel, Markus Neuditschko
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:肉用公牛与奶牛杂交可提高肉产量和异交率,从而提高未进入奶牛生产的犊牛的经济价值和体质。然而,杂交可能会降低赋予本地适应性的等位基因的剂量,或因犊牛体型增大而导致犊牛难产的风险增加。鉴于肉牛品种之间存在明显的表型差异,肉牛和奶牛品种之间存在不同的系统发育距离,以及品种内部存在基因组变异,犊牛可获得的经济和体能收益在很大程度上取决于杂交母本的选择。因此,本研究的目的是评估安格斯(AAN)、利木赞(LIM)或西门塔尔(SIM)肉牛与布朗瑞士(BSW)奶牛之间的基因组互补性,方法是量化 F1 杂交中基因组近交减少的情况,并确定可能受 BSW 特异性选择影响的基因:结果:获得了 181 头奶牛、34 头公牛及其 301 头 F1 后代的低通测序数据,以及 248 头 F1 后代的体重和胴体成分测量数据。在 BSW 奶牛中检测到的高基因组近亲繁殖水平在杂交品种中大大降低,父本品种之间仅有微小差异。在 BSW 奶牛中,发现了 585 个候选基因,其中与乳、肉、胴体和生产性状相关的基因所占比例过高。只有少数基因的非同义变异在 BSW 和肉牛品种之间存在强烈差异,其中包括四个紧密聚类的基因(FAM184B、NCAPG、DCAF16 和 LCORL),这些基因在 BSW 奶牛中几乎为固定的等位基因,但在 AAN 和 LIM 公牛中大多为参考等位基因的杂合子或同合子。这些基因的等位基因剂量与F1s胴体重量和蛋白质质量的降低有显著相关性:结论:在 BSW 和肉牛品种之间存在高度差异的非同义变异的少数基因中,有一些可能是由于肉牛和奶牛生产之间的权衡而导致 BSW 品种的胴体重量降低。由于具有相反效应的等位基因在肉牛中仍会发生分离,因此可利用标记辅助选择交配对来调节所需的表型,同时减少基因组近亲繁殖。
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Assessment of genome complementarity in three beef-on-dairy crossbreds reveals sire-specific effects on production traits with comparable rates of genomic inbreeding reduction.

Background: Crossbreeding beef bulls with dairy cows can improve the economic value and fitness of calves not entering dairy production owing to increased meat yield and heterosis. However, outcrossing might reduce the dosage of alleles that confer local adaptation or result in a higher risk of dystocia due to increased calf size. Given the clear phenotypic differences between beef breeds, the varying phylogenetic distances between beef and dairy breeds, and the genomic variations within breeds, the attainable economic and fitness gains of calves will strongly depend on the selection of sires for crossing. Thus, the aim of this study was to assess genome complementarity between Angus (AAN), Limousin (LIM), or Simmental (SIM) beef bulls and Brown Swiss (BSW) dairy cows by quantifying genomic inbreeding reduction in F1 crosses and identifying genes potentially under BSW-specific selection that might be affected by outcrossing.

Results: Low-pass sequencing data from 181 cows, 34 bulls, and 301 of their F1 progeny, and body weight and carcass composition measurements of 248 F1s were obtained. The high genomic inbreeding levels detected in the BSW cows were substantially reduced in the crossbreds, with only minor differences between the sire breeds. In the BSW cows, 585 candidate genes under selection were identified, overrepresenting genes associated with milk, meat and carcass, and production traits. Only a few genes were strongly differentiated at nonsynonymous variants between the BSW and beef breeds, including four tightly clustered genes (FAM184B, NCAPG, DCAF16, and LCORL) nearly fixed for alternate alleles in the BSW cows but mostly heterozygous or homozygous for the reference alleles in the AAN and LIM bulls. The alternate allele dosage at these genes significantly correlated with reduced carcass weight and protein mass in F1s.

Conclusion: Some of the few genes that were highly divergent between the BSW and beef breeds at nonsynonymous variants were likely under strong selection for reduced carcass weight in the BSW breed, potentially due to trade-offs between beef and dairy productions. As alleles with opposing effects still segregate in beef cattle, marker-assisted selection of mating pairs may be used to modulate the desired phenotypes and simultaneously decrease genomic inbreeding.

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来源期刊
BMC Genomics
BMC Genomics 生物-生物工程与应用微生物
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
4.50%
发文量
769
审稿时长
6.4 months
期刊介绍: BMC Genomics is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of genome-scale analysis, functional genomics, and proteomics. BMC Genomics is part of the BMC series which publishes subject-specific journals focused on the needs of individual research communities across all areas of biology and medicine. We offer an efficient, fair and friendly peer review service, and are committed to publishing all sound science, provided that there is some advance in knowledge presented by the work.
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