Impact of variation at the FTO locus on milk fat yield in Holstein dairy cattle.

This study explores the biological role of the Fat Mass and Obesity associated (FTO) gene locus on milk composition in German Holstein cattle. Since FTO controls energy homeostasis and expenditure and the FTO locus has repeatedly shown association with obesity in human studies, we tested FTO as a ca...

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Main Authors: Lea G Zielke, Ralf H Bortfeldt, Monika Reissmann, Jens Tetens, Georg Thaller, Gudrun A Brockmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3655180?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-00620be915534550a6cd125983e0da2e2020-11-24T21:18:03ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0185e6340610.1371/journal.pone.0063406Impact of variation at the FTO locus on milk fat yield in Holstein dairy cattle.Lea G ZielkeRalf H BortfeldtMonika ReissmannJens TetensGeorg ThallerGudrun A BrockmannThis study explores the biological role of the Fat Mass and Obesity associated (FTO) gene locus on milk composition in German Holstein cattle. Since FTO controls energy homeostasis and expenditure and the FTO locus has repeatedly shown association with obesity in human studies, we tested FTO as a candidate gene in particular for milk fat yield, which represents a high amount of energy secreted during lactation. The study was performed on 2,402 bulls and 860 cows where dense milk composition data were available. Genetic information was taken from a 2 Mb region around FTO. Five SNPs and two haplotype blocks in a 725 kb region covering FTO and the neighboring genes RPGRIP1L, U6ATAC, and 5 S rRNA were associated with milk fat yield and also affected protein yield in the same direction. Interestingly, higher frequency SNP alleles and haplotypes within the FTO gene increased milk fat and protein yields by up to 2.8 and 2.2 kg per lactation, respectively, while the most frequent haplotype in the upstream block covering exon 1 of FTO to exon 15 of RPGRIP1L had opposite effects with lower fat and milk yield. Both haplotype blocks were also significant in cows. The loci accounted for about 1% of the corresponding trait variance in the population. The association signals not only provided evidence for at least two causative mutations in the FTO locus with a functional effect on milk but also milk protein yield. The pleiotropic effects suggest a biological function on the usage of energy resources and the control of energy balance rather than directly affecting fat and protein synthesis. The identified effect of the obesity gene locus on milk energy content suggests an impact on infant nutrition by breast feeding in humans.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3655180?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lea G Zielke
Ralf H Bortfeldt
Monika Reissmann
Jens Tetens
Georg Thaller
Gudrun A Brockmann
spellingShingle Lea G Zielke
Ralf H Bortfeldt
Monika Reissmann
Jens Tetens
Georg Thaller
Gudrun A Brockmann
Impact of variation at the FTO locus on milk fat yield in Holstein dairy cattle.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Lea G Zielke
Ralf H Bortfeldt
Monika Reissmann
Jens Tetens
Georg Thaller
Gudrun A Brockmann
author_sort Lea G Zielke
title Impact of variation at the FTO locus on milk fat yield in Holstein dairy cattle.
title_short Impact of variation at the FTO locus on milk fat yield in Holstein dairy cattle.
title_full Impact of variation at the FTO locus on milk fat yield in Holstein dairy cattle.
title_fullStr Impact of variation at the FTO locus on milk fat yield in Holstein dairy cattle.
title_full_unstemmed Impact of variation at the FTO locus on milk fat yield in Holstein dairy cattle.
title_sort impact of variation at the fto locus on milk fat yield in holstein dairy cattle.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description This study explores the biological role of the Fat Mass and Obesity associated (FTO) gene locus on milk composition in German Holstein cattle. Since FTO controls energy homeostasis and expenditure and the FTO locus has repeatedly shown association with obesity in human studies, we tested FTO as a candidate gene in particular for milk fat yield, which represents a high amount of energy secreted during lactation. The study was performed on 2,402 bulls and 860 cows where dense milk composition data were available. Genetic information was taken from a 2 Mb region around FTO. Five SNPs and two haplotype blocks in a 725 kb region covering FTO and the neighboring genes RPGRIP1L, U6ATAC, and 5 S rRNA were associated with milk fat yield and also affected protein yield in the same direction. Interestingly, higher frequency SNP alleles and haplotypes within the FTO gene increased milk fat and protein yields by up to 2.8 and 2.2 kg per lactation, respectively, while the most frequent haplotype in the upstream block covering exon 1 of FTO to exon 15 of RPGRIP1L had opposite effects with lower fat and milk yield. Both haplotype blocks were also significant in cows. The loci accounted for about 1% of the corresponding trait variance in the population. The association signals not only provided evidence for at least two causative mutations in the FTO locus with a functional effect on milk but also milk protein yield. The pleiotropic effects suggest a biological function on the usage of energy resources and the control of energy balance rather than directly affecting fat and protein synthesis. The identified effect of the obesity gene locus on milk energy content suggests an impact on infant nutrition by breast feeding in humans.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3655180?pdf=render
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