Sequence-based genome-wide association study of individual milk mid-infrared wavenumbers in mixed-breed dairy cattle

Abstract Background Fourier-transform mid-infrared (FT-MIR) spectroscopy provides a high-throughput and inexpensive method for predicting milk composition and other novel traits from milk samples. While there have been many genome-wide association studies (GWAS) conducted on FT-MIR predicted traits,...

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Main Authors: Kathryn M. Tiplady, Thomas J. Lopdell, Edwardo Reynolds, Richard G. Sherlock, Michael Keehan, Thomas JJ. Johnson, Jennie E. Pryce, Stephen R. Davis, Richard J. Spelman, Bevin L. Harris, Dorian J. Garrick, Mathew D. Littlejohn
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: BMC 2021-07-01
Series:Genetics Selection Evolution
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12711-021-00648-9
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spelling doaj-3741a0b431e24b8783c25e8d5cfc1f732021-07-25T11:31:54ZdeuBMCGenetics Selection Evolution1297-96862021-07-0153112410.1186/s12711-021-00648-9Sequence-based genome-wide association study of individual milk mid-infrared wavenumbers in mixed-breed dairy cattleKathryn M. Tiplady0Thomas J. Lopdell1Edwardo Reynolds2Richard G. Sherlock3Michael Keehan4Thomas JJ. Johnson5Jennie E. Pryce6Stephen R. Davis7Richard J. Spelman8Bevin L. Harris9Dorian J. Garrick10Mathew D. Littlejohn11Research and Development, Livestock Improvement CorporationResearch and Development, Livestock Improvement CorporationSchool of Agriculture, Massey UniversityResearch and Development, Livestock Improvement CorporationResearch and Development, Livestock Improvement CorporationResearch and Development, Livestock Improvement CorporationSchool of Applied Systems Biology, La Trobe UniversityResearch and Development, Livestock Improvement CorporationResearch and Development, Livestock Improvement CorporationResearch and Development, Livestock Improvement CorporationSchool of Agriculture, Massey UniversityResearch and Development, Livestock Improvement CorporationAbstract Background Fourier-transform mid-infrared (FT-MIR) spectroscopy provides a high-throughput and inexpensive method for predicting milk composition and other novel traits from milk samples. While there have been many genome-wide association studies (GWAS) conducted on FT-MIR predicted traits, there have been few GWAS for individual FT-MIR wavenumbers. Using imputed whole-genome sequence for 38,085 mixed-breed New Zealand dairy cattle, we conducted GWAS on 895 individual FT-MIR wavenumber phenotypes, and assessed the value of these direct phenotypes for identifying candidate causal genes and variants, and improving our understanding of the physico-chemical properties of milk. Results Separate GWAS conducted for each of 895 individual FT-MIR wavenumber phenotypes, identified 450 1-Mbp genomic regions with significant FT-MIR wavenumber QTL, compared to 246 1-Mbp genomic regions with QTL identified for FT-MIR predicted milk composition traits. Use of mammary RNA-seq data and gene annotation information identified 38 co-localized and co-segregating expression QTL (eQTL), and 31 protein-sequence mutations for FT-MIR wavenumber phenotypes, the latter including a null mutation in the ABO gene that has a potential role in changing milk oligosaccharide profiles. For the candidate causative genes implicated in these analyses, we examined the strength of association between relevant loci and each wavenumber across the mid-infrared spectrum. This revealed shared association patterns for groups of genomically-distant loci, highlighting clusters of loci linked through their biological roles in lactation and their presumed impacts on the chemical composition of milk. Conclusions This study demonstrates the utility of FT-MIR wavenumber phenotypes for improving our understanding of milk composition, presenting a larger number of QTL and putative causative genes and variants than found from FT-MIR predicted composition traits. Examining patterns of significance across the mid-infrared spectrum for loci of interest further highlighted commonalities of association, which likely reflects the physico-chemical properties of milk constituents.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12711-021-00648-9
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kathryn M. Tiplady
Thomas J. Lopdell
Edwardo Reynolds
Richard G. Sherlock
Michael Keehan
Thomas JJ. Johnson
Jennie E. Pryce
Stephen R. Davis
Richard J. Spelman
Bevin L. Harris
Dorian J. Garrick
Mathew D. Littlejohn
spellingShingle Kathryn M. Tiplady
Thomas J. Lopdell
Edwardo Reynolds
Richard G. Sherlock
Michael Keehan
Thomas JJ. Johnson
Jennie E. Pryce
Stephen R. Davis
Richard J. Spelman
Bevin L. Harris
Dorian J. Garrick
Mathew D. Littlejohn
Sequence-based genome-wide association study of individual milk mid-infrared wavenumbers in mixed-breed dairy cattle
Genetics Selection Evolution
author_facet Kathryn M. Tiplady
Thomas J. Lopdell
Edwardo Reynolds
Richard G. Sherlock
Michael Keehan
Thomas JJ. Johnson
Jennie E. Pryce
Stephen R. Davis
Richard J. Spelman
Bevin L. Harris
Dorian J. Garrick
Mathew D. Littlejohn
author_sort Kathryn M. Tiplady
title Sequence-based genome-wide association study of individual milk mid-infrared wavenumbers in mixed-breed dairy cattle
title_short Sequence-based genome-wide association study of individual milk mid-infrared wavenumbers in mixed-breed dairy cattle
title_full Sequence-based genome-wide association study of individual milk mid-infrared wavenumbers in mixed-breed dairy cattle
title_fullStr Sequence-based genome-wide association study of individual milk mid-infrared wavenumbers in mixed-breed dairy cattle
title_full_unstemmed Sequence-based genome-wide association study of individual milk mid-infrared wavenumbers in mixed-breed dairy cattle
title_sort sequence-based genome-wide association study of individual milk mid-infrared wavenumbers in mixed-breed dairy cattle
publisher BMC
series Genetics Selection Evolution
issn 1297-9686
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Background Fourier-transform mid-infrared (FT-MIR) spectroscopy provides a high-throughput and inexpensive method for predicting milk composition and other novel traits from milk samples. While there have been many genome-wide association studies (GWAS) conducted on FT-MIR predicted traits, there have been few GWAS for individual FT-MIR wavenumbers. Using imputed whole-genome sequence for 38,085 mixed-breed New Zealand dairy cattle, we conducted GWAS on 895 individual FT-MIR wavenumber phenotypes, and assessed the value of these direct phenotypes for identifying candidate causal genes and variants, and improving our understanding of the physico-chemical properties of milk. Results Separate GWAS conducted for each of 895 individual FT-MIR wavenumber phenotypes, identified 450 1-Mbp genomic regions with significant FT-MIR wavenumber QTL, compared to 246 1-Mbp genomic regions with QTL identified for FT-MIR predicted milk composition traits. Use of mammary RNA-seq data and gene annotation information identified 38 co-localized and co-segregating expression QTL (eQTL), and 31 protein-sequence mutations for FT-MIR wavenumber phenotypes, the latter including a null mutation in the ABO gene that has a potential role in changing milk oligosaccharide profiles. For the candidate causative genes implicated in these analyses, we examined the strength of association between relevant loci and each wavenumber across the mid-infrared spectrum. This revealed shared association patterns for groups of genomically-distant loci, highlighting clusters of loci linked through their biological roles in lactation and their presumed impacts on the chemical composition of milk. Conclusions This study demonstrates the utility of FT-MIR wavenumber phenotypes for improving our understanding of milk composition, presenting a larger number of QTL and putative causative genes and variants than found from FT-MIR predicted composition traits. Examining patterns of significance across the mid-infrared spectrum for loci of interest further highlighted commonalities of association, which likely reflects the physico-chemical properties of milk constituents.
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12711-021-00648-9
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