Nandolo, Wilson and Mészáros, Gábor and Banda, Liveness Jessica and Gondwe, Timothy N. and Lamuno, Doreen and Mulindwa, Henry Aaron and Nakimbugwe, Helen N. and Wurzinger, Maria and Utsunomiya, Yuri T. and Woodward-Greene, M. Jennifer and Liu, Mei and Liu, George and Van Tassell, Curtis P. and Curik, Ino and Rosen, Benjamin D. and Sölkner, Johann (2019) Timing and Extent of Inbreeding in African Goats. Frontiers in Genetics, 10. ISSN 1664-8021
pubmed-zip/versions/1/package-entries/fgene-10-00537/fgene-10-00537.pdf - Published Version
Download (3MB)
Abstract
Genetic characterization of African goats is one of the current priorities in the improvement of goats in the continent. This study contributes to the characterization effort by determining the levels and number of generations to common ancestors (“age”) associated with inbreeding in African goat breeds and identifies regions that contain copy number variation mistyped as being homozygous. Illumina 50k single nucleotide polymorphism genotype data for 608 goats from 31 breeds were used to compute the level and age of inbreeding at both local (marker) and global levels (FG) using a model-based approach based on a hidden Markov model. Runs of homozygosity (ROH) segments detected using the Viterbi algorithm led to ROH-based inbreeding coefficients for all ROH (FROH) and for ROH longer than 2 Mb (FROH > 2Mb). Some of the genomic regions identified as having ROH are likely to be hemizygous regions (copy number deletions) mistyped as homozygous regions. Although the proportion of these miscalled ROH is small and does not substantially affect estimates of levels of inbreeding for individual animals, the inbreeding metrics were adjusted by removing these regions from the ROH. All the inbreeding metrics varied widely across breeds, with overall means of 0.0408, 0.0370, and 0.0691 and medians of 0.0125, 0.0098, and 0.0366 for FROH, FROH > 2Mb, and FG, respectively. Several breeds (including Menabe and Sofia from Madagascar) had high proportions of recent inbreeding, while Small East African, Ethiopian, and most of the West African breeds (including West African Dwarf) had more ancient inbreeding.
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
Subjects: | Souths Book > Medical Science |
Depositing User: | Unnamed user with email support@southsbook.com |
Date Deposited: | 17 Feb 2023 12:00 |
Last Modified: | 31 Jul 2024 13:58 |
URI: | http://research.europeanlibrarypress.com/id/eprint/200 |