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Climate clever clovers: New paradigm to reduce the environmental footprint of ruminants by breeding low methanogenic forages utilizing haplotype variation
Authors
Abdi
Banik
+52 more
Banik
Banik
Barrett
Bodas
Bradbury
Busquet
Butler
Cardozo
Chang
Coombes
Cullis
Dijkstra
Durmic
Ellis
Ellis
Falconer
Ghamkhar
Ghamkhar
Ghamkhar
Gilmour
Gouesnard
Grainger
Hegarty
Hirakawa
Johnson
Katznelson
Kaur
Kelly
Koressaar
Li
Li
Li
Loris
McDougall
Meng
Moss
Naqvi
Nichols
Nichols
Patra
Purcell
Sharon
Shi
Smith
Soliva
Sottomayor
Stefanova
Storey
Tang
Untergasser
Veitch
Zhang
Publication date
1 January 2017
Publisher
'Frontiers Media SA'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
© 2017 Kaur, Appels, Bayer, Keeble-Gagnere, Wang, Hirakawa, Shirasawa, Vercoe, Stefanova, Durmic, Nichols, Revell, Isobe, Edwards and Erskine. Mitigating methane production by ruminants is a significant challenge to global livestock production. This research offers a new paradigm to reduce methane emissions from ruminants by breeding climate-clever clovers. We demonstrate wide genetic diversity for the trait methanogenic potential in Australia’s key pasture legume, subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum L.). In a bi-parental population the broadsense heritability in methanogenic potential was moderate (H2D 0.4) and allelic variation in a region of Chr 8 accounted for 7.8% of phenotypic variation. In a genome-wide association study we identified four loci controlling methanogenic potential assessed by an in vitro fermentation system. Significantly, the discovery of a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) on Chr 5 in a defined haplotype block with an upstream putative candidate gene from a plant peroxidase-like superfamily (TSub_g18548) and a downstream lectin receptor protein kinase (TSub_g18549) provides valuable candidates for an assay for this complex trait. In this way haplotype variation can be tracked to breed pastures with reduced methanogenic potential. Of the quantitative trait loci candidates, the DNA-damage-repair/toleration DRT100-like protein (TSub_g26967), linked to avoid the severity of DNA damage induced by secondary metabolites, is considered central to enteric methane production, as are disease resistance (TSub_g26971, TSub_g26972, and TSub_g18549) and ribonuclease proteins (TSub_g26974, TSub_g26975). These proteins are good pointers to elucidate the genetic basis of in vitro microbial fermentability and enteric methanogenic potential in subterranean clover. The genes identified allow the design of a suite of markers for marker-assisted selection to reduce rumen methane emission in selected pasture legumes. We demonstrate the feasibility of a plant breeding approach without compromising animal productivity to mitigate enteric methane emissions, which is one of the most significant challenges to global livestock production
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