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Measuring the extent of linkage disequilibrium in commercial pig populations
40
Citations
24
References
2006
Year
Commercial Pig PopulationsGeneticsGenetic EpidemiologyLinkage AnalysisAnimal WelfareReproductive BiologyAnimal GeneticsAnimal StudyUnrelated IndividualsMolecular EcologyMammalogyBreedingBiostatisticsPublic HealthAnimal NutritionStatistical GeneticsGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsDomestic PigsLinkage DisequilibriumAnimal ScienceEvolutionary BiologyGenetic AdmixturePopulation GenomicsMedicineEffective Population Size
To evaluate the extent of linkage disequilibrium in domestic pigs, we genotyped 33 and 44 unrelated individuals from two commercial populations for 29 and five microsatellite markers located on chromosomes 15 and 2 respectively. A high proportion of marker pairs up to 40 cM apart exhibited significant linkage disequilibrium in both populations. Pair-wise r(2) values averaged between 0.15 and 0.50 (depending on chromosome and population) for markers <1 cM apart and declined to values of 0.05 for more distant syntenic markers. Our results suggest that both populations underwent a bottleneck approximately 20 generations ago, which reduced the effective population size from thousands to <200 animals.
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