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Association of methionine synthase gene polymorphisms with wool production and quality traits in Chinese Merino population12
21
Citations
24
References
2015
Year
Quality TraitsGeneticsHuman PolymorphismGene CharacterizationGenomicsChinese Merino Population12EpigeneticsAnimal GeneticsGenetic AnalysisGenotype-phenotype AssociationPublic HealthIntracellular MethionineAnimal PhysiologyAssociation AnalysisStatistical GeneticsGenetic FactorGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsFunctional GenomicsGenetic BasisBiologyDevelopmental BiologyAnimal ScienceWool ProductionMethionine SynthaseMedicine
Methionine synthase (MTR) plays a crucial role in maintaining homeostasis of intracellular methionine, folate, and homocysteine, and its activity correlates with DNA methylation in many mammalian tissues. Our previous genomewide association study identified that 1 SNP located in the gene was associated with several wool production and quality traits in Chinese Merino. To confirm the potential involvement of the gene in sheep wool production and quality traits, we performed sheep tissue expression profiling, SNP detection, and association analysis with sheep wool production and quality traits. The semiquantitative reverse transcription PCR analysis showed that the gene was differentially expressed in skin from Merino and Kazak sheep. The sequencing analysis identified a total of 13 SNP in the gene from Chinese Merino sheep. Comparison of the allele frequencies revealed that these 13 identified SNP were significantly different among the 6 tested Chinese Merino strains ( < 0.001). Linkage disequilibrium analysis showed that SNP 3 to 11 were strongly linked in a single haplotype block in the tested population. Association analysis showed that SNP 2 to 11 were significantly associated with the average wool fiber diameter and the fineness SD and that SNP 4 to 11 were significantly associated with the CV of fiber diameter trait ( < 0.05). Single nucleotide polymorphism 2 and SNP 5 to 12 were weakly associated with wool crimp. Similarly, the haplotypes derived from these 13 identified SNP were also significantly associated with the average wool fiber diameter, fineness SD, and the CV of fiber diameter ( < 0.05). Our results suggest that is a candidate gene for sheep wool production and quality traits, and the identified SNP might be used in sheep breeding.
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