Abstract

<div><p>This genome-wide association study (GWAS) was conducted to identify major loci that are significantly associated with carcass weight, and their effects, in order to provide increased understanding of the genetic architecture of carcass weight in Hanwoo. This genome-wide association study identified one major chromosome region ranging from 23 Mb to 25 Mb on chromosome 14 as being associated with carcass weight in Hanwoo. Significant Bonferroni-corrected genome-wide associations (<i>P<1.52</i>×<i>10<sup>−6</sup></i>) were detected for 6 Single Nucleotide Polymorphic (SNP) loci for carcass weight on chromosome 14. The most significant SNP was <i>BTB-01280026</i> (<i>P = 4.02×10<sup>−11</sup></i>), located in the 25 Mb region on Bos taurus autosome 14 (BTA14). The other 5 significant SNPs were <i>Hapmap27934-BTC-065223</i> (<i>P = 4.04×10<sup>−11</sup></i>) in 25.2 Mb, <i>BTB-01143580</i> (<i>P = 6.35×10<sup>−11</sup></i>) in 24.3 Mb, <i>Hapmap30932-BTC-011225</i> (<i>P = 5.92×10<sup>−10</sup></i>) in 24.8 Mb, <i>Hapmap27112-BTC-063342</i> (<i>P = 5.18×10<sup>−9</sup></i>) in 25.4 Mb, and <i>Hapmap24414-BTC-073009</i> (<i>P = 7.38×10<sup>−8</sup></i>) in 25.4 Mb, all on BTA 14. One SNP (<i>BTB-01143580; P = 6.35×10<sup>−11</sup></i>) lies independently from the other 5 SNPs. The 5 SNPs that lie together showed a large Linkage disequilibrium (LD) block (block size of 553 kb) with LD coefficients ranging from 0.53 to 0.89 within the block. The most significant SNPs accounted for 6.73% to 10.55% of additive genetic variance, which is quite a large proportion of the total additive genetic variance. The most significant SNP (<i>BTB-01280026; P = 4.02×10<sup>−11</sup></i>) had 16.96 kg of allele substitution effect, and the second most significant SNP (<i>Hapmap27934-BTC-065223; P = 4.04×10<sup>−11</sup></i>) had 18.06 kg of effect on carcass weight, which correspond to 44% and 47%, respectively, of the phenotypic standard deviation for carcass weight in Hanwoo cattle. Our results demonstrated that carcass weight was affected by a major Quantitative Trait Locus (QTL) with a large effect and by many SNPs with small effects that are normally distributed.</p></div

Similar works

Full text

thumbnail-image

FigShare

redirect
Last time updated on 12/02/2018

This paper was published in FigShare.

Having an issue?

Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.