Publication | Open Access
Genome Wide Association Analysis Reveals New Production Trait Genes in a Male Duroc Population
73
Citations
40
References
2015
Year
NutritionGeneticsReproductive GeneticsGrowth TraitsLinkage AnalysisHuman PolymorphismAnimal GeneticsMale Duroc PigsGenetic AnalysisGenome-wide Association StudyBody CompositionGenotype-phenotype AssociationGene Ontology AnalysisPublic HealthAnimal PhysiologyStatistical GeneticsGenetic FactorGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsGenetic BasisGenetic DeterminantAnimal ScienceEvolutionary BiologyPhysiologyMale Duroc PopulationMetabolismMedicine
In this study, 796 male Duroc pigs were used to identify genomic regions controlling growth traits. Three production traits were studied: food conversion ratio, days to 100 KG, and average daily gain, using a panel of 39,436 single nucleotide polymorphisms. In total, we detected 11 genome-wide and 162 chromosome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism trait associations. The Gene ontology analysis identified 14 candidate genes close to significant single nucleotide polymorphisms, with growth-related functions: six for days to 100 KG (WT1, FBXO3, DOCK7, PPP3CA, AGPAT9, and NKX6-1), seven for food conversion ratio (MAP2, TBX15, IVL, ARL15, CPS1, VWC2L, and VAV3), and one for average daily gain (COL27A1). Gene ontology analysis indicated that most of the candidate genes are involved in muscle, fat, bone or nervous system development, nutrient absorption, and metabolism, which are all either directly or indirectly related to growth traits in pigs. Additionally, we found four haplotype blocks composed of suggestive single nucleotide polymorphisms located in the growth trait-related quantitative trait loci and further narrowed down the ranges, the largest of which decreased by ~60 Mb. Hence, our results could be used to improve pig production traits by increasing the frequency of favorable alleles via artificial selection.
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