5 research outputs found

    The discovery of novel recessive genetic disorders in dairy cattle : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Animal Science at AL Rae Centre of Genetics and Breeding, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand

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    The selection of desirable characteristics in livestock has resulted in the transmission of advantageous genetic variants for generations. The advent of artificial insemination has accelerated the propagation of these advantageous genetic variants and led to tremendous advances in animal productivity. However, this intensive selection has led to the rapid uptake of deleterious alleles as well. Recently, a recessive mutation in the GALNT2 gene was identified to dramatically impair growth and production traits in dairy cattle causing small calf syndrome. The research presented here seeks to further investigate the presence and impact of recessive mutations in dairy cattle. A primary aim of genetics is to identify causal variants and understand how they act to manipulate a phenotype. As datasets have expanded, larger analyses are now possible and statistical methods to discover causal mutations have become commonplace. One such method, the genome-wide association study (GWAS), presents considerable exploratory utility in identifying quantitative trait loci (QTL) and causal mutations. GWAS' have predominantly focused on identifying additive genetic effects assuming that each allele at a locus acts independently of the other, whereas non-additive effects including dominant, recessive, and epistatic effects have been neglected. Here, we developed a single-locus non-additive GWAS model intended for the detection of dominant and recessive genetic mechanisms. We applied our non-additive GWAS model to growth, developmental, and lactation phenotypes in dairy cattle. We identified several candidate causal mutations that are associated with moderate to large deleterious recessive disorders of animal welfare and production. These mutations included premature-stop (MUS81, ITGAL, LRCH4, RBM34), splice disrupting (FGD4, GALNT2), and missense (PLCD4, MTRF1, DPF2, DOCK8, SLC25A4, KIAA0556, IL4R) variants, and these occur at surprisingly high frequencies in cattle. We further investigated these candidates for anatomical, molecular, and metabolic phenotypes to understand how these disorders might manifest. In some cases, these mutations were analogous to disorder-causing mutations in other species, these included: Coffin-Siris syndrome (DPF2); Charcot Marie Tooth disease (FGD4); a congenital disorder of glycosylation (GALNT2); hyper Immunoglobulin-E syndrome (DOCK8); Joubert syndrome (KIAA0556); and mitochondrial disease (SLC25A4). These discoveries demonstrate that deleterious recessive mutations exist in dairy cattle at remarkably high frequencies and we are able to detect these disorders through modern genotyping and phenotyping capabilities. These are important findings that can be used to improve the health and productivity of dairy cattle in New Zealand and internationally

    Genome-wide association analysis reveals QTL and candidate mutations involved in white spotting in cattle

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    International audienceAbstractBackgroundWhite spotting of the coat is a characteristic trait of various domestic species including cattle and other mammals. It is a hallmark of Holstein–Friesian cattle, and several previous studies have detected genetic loci with major effects for white spotting in animals with Holstein–Friesian ancestry. Here, our aim was to better understand the underlying genetic and molecular mechanisms of white spotting, by conducting the largest mapping study for this trait in cattle, to date.ResultsUsing imputed whole-genome sequence data, we conducted a genome-wide association analysis in 2973 mixed-breed cows and bulls. Highly significant quantitative trait loci (QTL) were found on chromosomes 6 and 22, highlighting the well-established coat color genes KIT and MITF as likely responsible for these effects. These results are in broad agreement with previous studies, although we also report a third significant QTL on chromosome 2 that appears to be novel. This signal maps immediately adjacent to the PAX3 gene, which encodes a known transcription factor that controls MITF expression and is the causal locus for white spotting in horses. More detailed examination of these loci revealed a candidate causal mutation in PAX3 (p.Thr424Met), and another candidate mutation (rs209784468) within a conserved element in intron 2 of MITF transcripts expressed in the skin. These analyses also revealed a mechanistic ambiguity at the chromosome 6 locus, where highly dispersed association signals suggested multiple or multiallelic QTL involving KIT and/or other genes in this region.ConclusionsOur findings extend those of previous studies that reported KIT as a likely causal gene for white spotting, and report novel associations between candidate causal mutations in both the MITF and PAX3 genes. The sizes of the effects of these QTL are substantial, and could be used to select animals with darker, or conversely whiter, coats depending on the desired characteristics

    Genome-wide association analysis reveals QTL and candidate mutations involved in white spotting in cattle

    Get PDF
    International audienceAbstractBackgroundWhite spotting of the coat is a characteristic trait of various domestic species including cattle and other mammals. It is a hallmark of Holstein–Friesian cattle, and several previous studies have detected genetic loci with major effects for white spotting in animals with Holstein–Friesian ancestry. Here, our aim was to better understand the underlying genetic and molecular mechanisms of white spotting, by conducting the largest mapping study for this trait in cattle, to date.ResultsUsing imputed whole-genome sequence data, we conducted a genome-wide association analysis in 2973 mixed-breed cows and bulls. Highly significant quantitative trait loci (QTL) were found on chromosomes 6 and 22, highlighting the well-established coat color genes KIT and MITF as likely responsible for these effects. These results are in broad agreement with previous studies, although we also report a third significant QTL on chromosome 2 that appears to be novel. This signal maps immediately adjacent to the PAX3 gene, which encodes a known transcription factor that controls MITF expression and is the causal locus for white spotting in horses. More detailed examination of these loci revealed a candidate causal mutation in PAX3 (p.Thr424Met), and another candidate mutation (rs209784468) within a conserved element in intron 2 of MITF transcripts expressed in the skin. These analyses also revealed a mechanistic ambiguity at the chromosome 6 locus, where highly dispersed association signals suggested multiple or multiallelic QTL involving KIT and/or other genes in this region.ConclusionsOur findings extend those of previous studies that reported KIT as a likely causal gene for white spotting, and report novel associations between candidate causal mutations in both the MITF and PAX3 genes. The sizes of the effects of these QTL are substantial, and could be used to select animals with darker, or conversely whiter, coats depending on the desired characteristics

    Non-additive association analysis using proxy phenotypes identifies novel cattle syndromes.

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    Mammalian species carry ~100 loss-of-function variants per individual(1,2), where ~1-5 of these impact essential genes and cause embryonic lethality or severe disease when homozygous(3). The functions of the remainder are more difficult to resolve, although the assumption is that these variants impact fitness in less manifest ways. Here we report one of the largest sequence-resolution screens of cattle to date, targeting discovery and validation of non-additive effects in 130,725 animals. We highlight six novel recessive loci with impacts generally exceeding the largest-effect variants identified from additive genome-wide association studies, presenting analogs of human diseases and hitherto-unrecognized disorders. These loci present compelling missense (PLCD4, MTRF1 and DPF2), premature stop (MUS81) and splice-disrupting (GALNT2 and FGD4) mutations, together explaining substantial proportions of inbreeding depression. These results demonstrate that the frequency distribution of deleterious alleles segregating in selected species can afford sufficient power to directly map novel disorders, presenting selection opportunities to minimize the incidence of genetic disease
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