Review: Genomics of bull fertility

Fertility is one of the most economically important traits in both beef and dairy cattle production; however, only female fertility is typically subjected to selection. Male and female fertility have only a small positive genetic correlation which is likely due to the existence of a relatively small...

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Main Authors: JeremyF. Taylor, RobertD. Schnabel, Peter Sutovsky
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-01-01
Series:Animal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731118000599
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spelling doaj-6ccb25b54871442f93928efafbab17742021-06-06T04:54:45ZengElsevierAnimal1751-73112018-01-0112s172s183Review: Genomics of bull fertilityJeremyF. Taylor0RobertD. Schnabel1Peter Sutovsky2Division of Animal Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, USADivision of Animal Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, USA; Informatics Institute, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, USADivision of Animal Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, USA; Departments of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women’s Health, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, USAFertility is one of the most economically important traits in both beef and dairy cattle production; however, only female fertility is typically subjected to selection. Male and female fertility have only a small positive genetic correlation which is likely due to the existence of a relatively small number of genetic variants within each breed that cause embryonic and developmental losses. Genomic tools have been developed that allow the identification of lethal recessive loci based upon marker haplotypes. Selection against haplotypes harbouring lethal alleles in conjunction with selection to improve female fertility will result in an improvement in male fertility. Genomic selection has resulted in a two to fourfold increase in the rate of genetic improvement of most dairy traits in US Holstein cattle, including female fertility. Considering the rapidly increasing rate of adoption of high-throughput single nucleotide polymorphism genotyping in both the US dairy and beef industries, genomic selection should be the most effective of all currently available approaches to improve male fertility. However, male fertility phenotypes are not routinely recorded in natural service mating systems and when artificial insemination is used, semen doses may be titrated to lower post-thaw progressively motile sperm numbers for high-merit and high-demand bulls. Standardization of sperm dosages across bull studs for semen distributed from young bulls would allow the capture of sire conception rate phenotypes for young bulls that could be used to generate predictions of genetic merit for male fertility in both males and females. These data would allow genomic selection to be implemented for male fertility in addition to female fertility within the US dairy industry. While the rate of use of artificial insemination is much lower within the US beef industry, the adoption of sexed semen in the dairy industry has allowed dairy herds to select cows from which heifer replacements are produced and cows that are used to produce terminal crossbred bull calves sired by beef breed bulls. Capture of sire conception rate phenotypes in dairy herds utilizing sexed semen will contribute data enabling genomic selection for male fertility in beef cattle breeds. As the commercial sector of the beef industry increasingly adopts fixed-time artificial insemination, sire conception rate phenotypes can be captured to facilitate the development of estimates of genetic merit for male fertility within US beef breeds.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731118000599bull fertilitygenomic selectiongenome-wide association studycandidate genesquantitative trait loci
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author JeremyF. Taylor
RobertD. Schnabel
Peter Sutovsky
spellingShingle JeremyF. Taylor
RobertD. Schnabel
Peter Sutovsky
Review: Genomics of bull fertility
Animal
bull fertility
genomic selection
genome-wide association study
candidate genes
quantitative trait loci
author_facet JeremyF. Taylor
RobertD. Schnabel
Peter Sutovsky
author_sort JeremyF. Taylor
title Review: Genomics of bull fertility
title_short Review: Genomics of bull fertility
title_full Review: Genomics of bull fertility
title_fullStr Review: Genomics of bull fertility
title_full_unstemmed Review: Genomics of bull fertility
title_sort review: genomics of bull fertility
publisher Elsevier
series Animal
issn 1751-7311
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Fertility is one of the most economically important traits in both beef and dairy cattle production; however, only female fertility is typically subjected to selection. Male and female fertility have only a small positive genetic correlation which is likely due to the existence of a relatively small number of genetic variants within each breed that cause embryonic and developmental losses. Genomic tools have been developed that allow the identification of lethal recessive loci based upon marker haplotypes. Selection against haplotypes harbouring lethal alleles in conjunction with selection to improve female fertility will result in an improvement in male fertility. Genomic selection has resulted in a two to fourfold increase in the rate of genetic improvement of most dairy traits in US Holstein cattle, including female fertility. Considering the rapidly increasing rate of adoption of high-throughput single nucleotide polymorphism genotyping in both the US dairy and beef industries, genomic selection should be the most effective of all currently available approaches to improve male fertility. However, male fertility phenotypes are not routinely recorded in natural service mating systems and when artificial insemination is used, semen doses may be titrated to lower post-thaw progressively motile sperm numbers for high-merit and high-demand bulls. Standardization of sperm dosages across bull studs for semen distributed from young bulls would allow the capture of sire conception rate phenotypes for young bulls that could be used to generate predictions of genetic merit for male fertility in both males and females. These data would allow genomic selection to be implemented for male fertility in addition to female fertility within the US dairy industry. While the rate of use of artificial insemination is much lower within the US beef industry, the adoption of sexed semen in the dairy industry has allowed dairy herds to select cows from which heifer replacements are produced and cows that are used to produce terminal crossbred bull calves sired by beef breed bulls. Capture of sire conception rate phenotypes in dairy herds utilizing sexed semen will contribute data enabling genomic selection for male fertility in beef cattle breeds. As the commercial sector of the beef industry increasingly adopts fixed-time artificial insemination, sire conception rate phenotypes can be captured to facilitate the development of estimates of genetic merit for male fertility within US beef breeds.
topic bull fertility
genomic selection
genome-wide association study
candidate genes
quantitative trait loci
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731118000599
work_keys_str_mv AT jeremyftaylor reviewgenomicsofbullfertility
AT robertdschnabel reviewgenomicsofbullfertility
AT petersutovsky reviewgenomicsofbullfertility
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