Using a very low-density SNP panel for genomic selection in a breeding program for sheep

Abstract Background Building an efficient reference population for genomic selection is an issue when the recorded population is small and phenotypes are poorly informed, which is often the case in sheep breeding programs. Using stochastic simulation, we evaluated a genomic design based on a referen...

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Main Authors: Jérôme Raoul, Andrew A. Swan, Jean-Michel Elsen
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: BMC 2017-10-01
Series:Genetics Selection Evolution
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12711-017-0351-0
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spelling doaj-76f7adf9589c41a4a96b926b9d6488ce2020-11-25T02:32:25ZdeuBMCGenetics Selection Evolution1297-96862017-10-0149111210.1186/s12711-017-0351-0Using a very low-density SNP panel for genomic selection in a breeding program for sheepJérôme Raoul0Andrew A. Swan1Jean-Michel Elsen2Institut de l’ElevageAnimal Genetics and Breeding Unit, University of New EnglandGenPhySE, INRAAbstract Background Building an efficient reference population for genomic selection is an issue when the recorded population is small and phenotypes are poorly informed, which is often the case in sheep breeding programs. Using stochastic simulation, we evaluated a genomic design based on a reference population with medium-density genotypes [around 45 K single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)] of dams that were imputed from very low-density genotypes (≤ 1000 SNPs). Methods A population under selection for a maternal trait was simulated using real genotypes. Genetic gains realized from classical selection and genomic selection designs were compared. Genomic selection scenarios that differed in reference population structure (whether or not dams were included in the reference) and genotype quality (medium-density or imputed to medium-density from very low-density) were evaluated. Results The genomic design increased genetic gain by 26% when the reference population was based on sire medium-density genotypes and by 54% when the reference population included both sire and dam medium-density genotypes. When medium-density genotypes of male candidates and dams were replaced by imputed genotypes from very low-density SNP genotypes (1000 SNPs), the increase in gain was 22% for the sire reference population and 42% for the sire and dam reference population. The rate of increase in inbreeding was lower (from − 20 to − 34%) for the genomic design than for the classical design regardless of the genomic scenario. Conclusions We show that very low-density genotypes of male candidates and dams combined with an imputation process result in a substantial increase in genetic gain for small sheep breeding programs.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12711-017-0351-0
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jérôme Raoul
Andrew A. Swan
Jean-Michel Elsen
spellingShingle Jérôme Raoul
Andrew A. Swan
Jean-Michel Elsen
Using a very low-density SNP panel for genomic selection in a breeding program for sheep
Genetics Selection Evolution
author_facet Jérôme Raoul
Andrew A. Swan
Jean-Michel Elsen
author_sort Jérôme Raoul
title Using a very low-density SNP panel for genomic selection in a breeding program for sheep
title_short Using a very low-density SNP panel for genomic selection in a breeding program for sheep
title_full Using a very low-density SNP panel for genomic selection in a breeding program for sheep
title_fullStr Using a very low-density SNP panel for genomic selection in a breeding program for sheep
title_full_unstemmed Using a very low-density SNP panel for genomic selection in a breeding program for sheep
title_sort using a very low-density snp panel for genomic selection in a breeding program for sheep
publisher BMC
series Genetics Selection Evolution
issn 1297-9686
publishDate 2017-10-01
description Abstract Background Building an efficient reference population for genomic selection is an issue when the recorded population is small and phenotypes are poorly informed, which is often the case in sheep breeding programs. Using stochastic simulation, we evaluated a genomic design based on a reference population with medium-density genotypes [around 45 K single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)] of dams that were imputed from very low-density genotypes (≤ 1000 SNPs). Methods A population under selection for a maternal trait was simulated using real genotypes. Genetic gains realized from classical selection and genomic selection designs were compared. Genomic selection scenarios that differed in reference population structure (whether or not dams were included in the reference) and genotype quality (medium-density or imputed to medium-density from very low-density) were evaluated. Results The genomic design increased genetic gain by 26% when the reference population was based on sire medium-density genotypes and by 54% when the reference population included both sire and dam medium-density genotypes. When medium-density genotypes of male candidates and dams were replaced by imputed genotypes from very low-density SNP genotypes (1000 SNPs), the increase in gain was 22% for the sire reference population and 42% for the sire and dam reference population. The rate of increase in inbreeding was lower (from − 20 to − 34%) for the genomic design than for the classical design regardless of the genomic scenario. Conclusions We show that very low-density genotypes of male candidates and dams combined with an imputation process result in a substantial increase in genetic gain for small sheep breeding programs.
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12711-017-0351-0
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