Novel genes involved in the genetic architecture of temperament in Brahman cattle.
Cattle temperament is a complex and economically relevant trait. The objective of this study was to identify genomic regions and genes associated with cattle temperament. From a Brahman cattle population of 1,370 animals evaluated for temperament traits (Exit velocity-EV, Pen Score-PS, Temperament S...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
2020-01-01
|
Series: | PLoS ONE |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237825 |
id |
doaj-1bcf4b6316594c10ad8118ef1f245696 |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-1bcf4b6316594c10ad8118ef1f2456962021-03-03T22:05:01ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01158e023782510.1371/journal.pone.0237825Novel genes involved in the genetic architecture of temperament in Brahman cattle.Francisco Alejandro Paredes-SánchezAna María Sifuentes-RincónEduardo CasasWilliams Arellano-VeraG Manuel Parra-BracamonteDavid G RileyThomas H WelshRonald D RandelCattle temperament is a complex and economically relevant trait. The objective of this study was to identify genomic regions and genes associated with cattle temperament. From a Brahman cattle population of 1,370 animals evaluated for temperament traits (Exit velocity-EV, Pen Score-PS, Temperament Score-TS), two groups of temperament-contrasting animals were identified based on their EV-average values ±1/2 standard deviation (SD). To be considered in the calm group, the EV of females ranged between 0.16-1.82 m/s (n = 50) and the EV of males ranged between 0.4-1.56 m/s (n = 48). Females were classified as temperamental if their EV ranged between 3.13-7.66 m/s (n = 46) and males were classified as temperamental if their EV ranged between 3.05-10.83 m/s (n = 45). Selected animals were genotyped using a total of 139,376 SNPs (GGP-HD-150K), evaluated for their association with EV. The Genome-Wide Association analysis (GWAS) identified fourteen SNPs: rs135340276, rs134895560, rs110190635, rs42949831, rs135982573, rs109393235, rs109531929, rs135087545, rs41839733, rs42486577, rs136661522, rs110882543, rs110864071, rs109722627, (P<8.1E-05), nine of them were located on intergenic regions, harboring seventeen genes, of which only ACER3, VRK2, FANCL and SLCO3A1 were considered candidate associated with bovine temperament due to their reported biological functions. Five SNPs were located at introns of the NRXN3, EXOC4, CACNG4 and SLC9A4 genes. The indicated candidate genes are implicated in a wide range of behavioural phenotypes and complex cognitive functions. The association of the fourteen SNPs on bovine temperament traits (EV, PS and TS) was evaluated; all these SNPs were significant for EV; only some were associated with PS and TS. Fourteen SNPs were associated with EV which allowed the identification of twenty-one candidate genes for Brahman temperament. From a functional point of view, the five intronic SNPs identified in this study, are candidates to address control of bovine temperament, further investigation will probe their role in expression of this trait.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237825 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Francisco Alejandro Paredes-Sánchez Ana María Sifuentes-Rincón Eduardo Casas Williams Arellano-Vera G Manuel Parra-Bracamonte David G Riley Thomas H Welsh Ronald D Randel |
spellingShingle |
Francisco Alejandro Paredes-Sánchez Ana María Sifuentes-Rincón Eduardo Casas Williams Arellano-Vera G Manuel Parra-Bracamonte David G Riley Thomas H Welsh Ronald D Randel Novel genes involved in the genetic architecture of temperament in Brahman cattle. PLoS ONE |
author_facet |
Francisco Alejandro Paredes-Sánchez Ana María Sifuentes-Rincón Eduardo Casas Williams Arellano-Vera G Manuel Parra-Bracamonte David G Riley Thomas H Welsh Ronald D Randel |
author_sort |
Francisco Alejandro Paredes-Sánchez |
title |
Novel genes involved in the genetic architecture of temperament in Brahman cattle. |
title_short |
Novel genes involved in the genetic architecture of temperament in Brahman cattle. |
title_full |
Novel genes involved in the genetic architecture of temperament in Brahman cattle. |
title_fullStr |
Novel genes involved in the genetic architecture of temperament in Brahman cattle. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Novel genes involved in the genetic architecture of temperament in Brahman cattle. |
title_sort |
novel genes involved in the genetic architecture of temperament in brahman cattle. |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS ONE |
issn |
1932-6203 |
publishDate |
2020-01-01 |
description |
Cattle temperament is a complex and economically relevant trait. The objective of this study was to identify genomic regions and genes associated with cattle temperament. From a Brahman cattle population of 1,370 animals evaluated for temperament traits (Exit velocity-EV, Pen Score-PS, Temperament Score-TS), two groups of temperament-contrasting animals were identified based on their EV-average values ±1/2 standard deviation (SD). To be considered in the calm group, the EV of females ranged between 0.16-1.82 m/s (n = 50) and the EV of males ranged between 0.4-1.56 m/s (n = 48). Females were classified as temperamental if their EV ranged between 3.13-7.66 m/s (n = 46) and males were classified as temperamental if their EV ranged between 3.05-10.83 m/s (n = 45). Selected animals were genotyped using a total of 139,376 SNPs (GGP-HD-150K), evaluated for their association with EV. The Genome-Wide Association analysis (GWAS) identified fourteen SNPs: rs135340276, rs134895560, rs110190635, rs42949831, rs135982573, rs109393235, rs109531929, rs135087545, rs41839733, rs42486577, rs136661522, rs110882543, rs110864071, rs109722627, (P<8.1E-05), nine of them were located on intergenic regions, harboring seventeen genes, of which only ACER3, VRK2, FANCL and SLCO3A1 were considered candidate associated with bovine temperament due to their reported biological functions. Five SNPs were located at introns of the NRXN3, EXOC4, CACNG4 and SLC9A4 genes. The indicated candidate genes are implicated in a wide range of behavioural phenotypes and complex cognitive functions. The association of the fourteen SNPs on bovine temperament traits (EV, PS and TS) was evaluated; all these SNPs were significant for EV; only some were associated with PS and TS. Fourteen SNPs were associated with EV which allowed the identification of twenty-one candidate genes for Brahman temperament. From a functional point of view, the five intronic SNPs identified in this study, are candidates to address control of bovine temperament, further investigation will probe their role in expression of this trait. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237825 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT franciscoalejandroparedessanchez novelgenesinvolvedinthegeneticarchitectureoftemperamentinbrahmancattle AT anamariasifuentesrincon novelgenesinvolvedinthegeneticarchitectureoftemperamentinbrahmancattle AT eduardocasas novelgenesinvolvedinthegeneticarchitectureoftemperamentinbrahmancattle AT williamsarellanovera novelgenesinvolvedinthegeneticarchitectureoftemperamentinbrahmancattle AT gmanuelparrabracamonte novelgenesinvolvedinthegeneticarchitectureoftemperamentinbrahmancattle AT davidgriley novelgenesinvolvedinthegeneticarchitectureoftemperamentinbrahmancattle AT thomashwelsh novelgenesinvolvedinthegeneticarchitectureoftemperamentinbrahmancattle AT ronalddrandel novelgenesinvolvedinthegeneticarchitectureoftemperamentinbrahmancattle |
_version_ |
1714813430325575680 |