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1.
J Appl Genet ; 65(1): 167-180, 2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38110827

RESUMO

Runs of homozygosity (ROH) are contiguous genomic regions, homozygous across all sites which arise in an individual due to the parents transmitting identical haplotypes to their offspring. The genetic improvement program of Sahiwal cattle after decades of selection needs re-assessment of breeding strategy and population phenomena. Hence, the present study was carried out to optimize input parameters in PLINK for ROH estimates, to explore ROH islands and assessment of pedigree and genome-based inbreeding in Sahiwal cattle. The sliding window approach with parameters standardized to define ROH for the specific population under study was used for the identification of runs. The optimum maximum gap, density, window-snp and window-threshold were 250 Kb, 120 Kb/SNP, 10, 0.05 respectively and ROH patterns were also characterized. ROH islands were defined as the short homozygous genomic regions shared by a large proportion of individuals in a population, containing significantly higher occurrences of ROH than the population specific threshold level. These were identified using the -homozyg-group function of the PLINK v1.9 program. Our results indicated that the Islands of ROH harbor a few candidate genes, ACAD11, RFX4, BANP, UBA5 that are associated with major economic traits. The average FPED (Pedigree based inbreeding coefficient), FROH (Genomic inbreeding coefficient), FHOM (Inbreeding estimated as the ratio of observed and expected homozygous genotypes), FGRM (Inbreeding estimated on genomic relationship method) and FGRM0.5 (Inbreeding estimated from the diagonal of a GRM with allele frequencies near to 0.5) were 0.009, 0.091, 0.035, -0.104 and -0.009, respectively. Our study revealed the optimum parameter setting in PLINK viz. maximal gaps between two SNPs, minimal density of SNPs in a segment (in kb/SNP) and scanning window size to identify ROH segments, which will enable ROH estimation more efficient and comparable across various SNP genotyping-based studies. The result further emphasized the significant role of genomics in unraveling population diversity, selection signatures and inbreeding in the ongoing Sahiwal breed improvement programs.


Assuntos
Genoma , Endogamia , Humanos , Animais , Bovinos/genética , Homozigoto , Genoma/genética , Genótipo , Genômica/métodos , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único , Enzimas Ativadoras de Ubiquitina
2.
Anim Biosci ; 2023 Nov 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37946419

RESUMO

Objective: Karan Fries (KF), a high-producing composite cattle was developed through crossing indicine Tharparkar cows with taurine bulls (Holstein Friesian, Brown Swiss, and Jersey), to increase the milk yield across India. This composite cattle population must maintain sufficient genetic diversity for long-term development and breed improvement in the coming years. The level of Linkage disequilibrium (LD) measures the influence of population genetic forces on the genomic structure and provides insights into the evolutionary history of populations, while the decay of LD is important in understanding the limits of genome-wide association studies for a population. Effective population size (Ne) which is genomically based on LD accumulated over the course of previous generations, is a valuable tool for evaluation of the genetic diversity and level of inbreeding. The present study was undertaken to understand KF population dynamics through the estimation of Ne and LD for the long-term sustainability of these breeds. Methods: The present study included 96 KF samples genotyped using Illumina HDBovine array to estimate the effective population and examine the LD pattern. The genotype data were also obtained for other crossbreds (Santa Gertrudis, Brangus, and Beefmaster) and Holstein Friesian cattle for comparison purposes. Results: The average LD between SNPs was r2 = 0.13 in the present study. LD decay (r2 = 0.2) was observed at 40 kb inter-marker distance, indicating a panel with 62765 SNPs was sufficient for genomic breeding value estimation in KF cattle. The pedigree-based effective population size (Ne) of KF was determined to be 78, while the Ne estimates obtained using LD-based methods were 52 (SNeP) and 219 (Genetic Optimization for Ne Estimation - GONE), respectively. Conclusion: KF cattle have an effective population size (Ne) exceeding the FAO's minimum recommended level of 50, which was desirable. The study also revealed significant population dynamics of KF cattle and increased our understanding of devising suitable breeding strategies for long-term sustainable development.

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