Characterization of a haplotype-reference panel for genotyping by low-pass sequencing in Swiss Large White pigs

Abstract Background The key-ancestor approach has been frequently applied to prioritize individuals for whole-genome sequencing based on their marginal genetic contribution to current populations. Using this approach, we selected 70 key ancestors from two lines of the Swiss Large White breed that ha...

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Main Authors: Adéla Nosková, Meenu Bhati, Naveen Kumar Kadri, Danang Crysnanto, Stefan Neuenschwander, Andreas Hofer, Hubert Pausch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-04-01
Series:BMC Genomics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-021-07610-5
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spelling doaj-cfaa704f6eb74628995f3788737fdc0d2021-04-25T11:24:34ZengBMCBMC Genomics1471-21642021-04-0122111410.1186/s12864-021-07610-5Characterization of a haplotype-reference panel for genotyping by low-pass sequencing in Swiss Large White pigsAdéla Nosková0Meenu Bhati1Naveen Kumar Kadri2Danang Crysnanto3Stefan Neuenschwander4Andreas Hofer5Hubert Pausch6Animal Genomics, ETH ZürichAnimal Genomics, ETH ZürichAnimal Genomics, ETH ZürichAnimal Genomics, ETH ZürichAnimal Genetics, ETH ZürichSUISAGAnimal Genomics, ETH ZürichAbstract Background The key-ancestor approach has been frequently applied to prioritize individuals for whole-genome sequencing based on their marginal genetic contribution to current populations. Using this approach, we selected 70 key ancestors from two lines of the Swiss Large White breed that have been selected divergently for fertility and fattening traits and sequenced their genomes with short paired-end reads. Results Using pedigree records, we estimated the effective population size of the dam and sire line to 72 and 44, respectively. In order to assess sequence variation in both lines, we sequenced the genomes of 70 boars at an average coverage of 16.69-fold. The boars explained 87.95 and 95.35% of the genetic diversity of the breeding populations of the dam and sire line, respectively. Reference-guided variant discovery using the GATK revealed 26,862,369 polymorphic sites. Principal component, admixture and fixation index (FST) analyses indicated considerable genetic differentiation between the lines. Genomic inbreeding quantified using runs of homozygosity was higher in the sire than dam line (0.28 vs 0.26). Using two complementary approaches, we detected 51 signatures of selection. However, only six signatures of selection overlapped between both lines. We used the sequenced haplotypes of the 70 key ancestors as a reference panel to call 22,618,811 genotypes in 175 pigs that had been sequenced at very low coverage (1.11-fold) using the GLIMPSE software. The genotype concordance, non-reference sensitivity and non-reference discrepancy between thus inferred and Illumina PorcineSNP60 BeadChip-called genotypes was 97.60, 98.73 and 3.24%, respectively. The low-pass sequencing-derived genomic relationship coefficients were highly correlated (r > 0.99) with those obtained from microarray genotyping. Conclusions We assessed genetic diversity within and between two lines of the Swiss Large White pig breed. Our analyses revealed considerable differentiation, even though the split into two populations occurred only few generations ago. The sequenced haplotypes of the key ancestor animals enabled us to implement genotyping by low-pass sequencing which offers an intriguing cost-effective approach to increase the variant density over current array-based genotyping by more than 350-fold.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-021-07610-5Swiss large whiteGenetic diversityLow-pass sequencingGenotyping by sequencingKey ancestor animals
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adéla Nosková
Meenu Bhati
Naveen Kumar Kadri
Danang Crysnanto
Stefan Neuenschwander
Andreas Hofer
Hubert Pausch
spellingShingle Adéla Nosková
Meenu Bhati
Naveen Kumar Kadri
Danang Crysnanto
Stefan Neuenschwander
Andreas Hofer
Hubert Pausch
Characterization of a haplotype-reference panel for genotyping by low-pass sequencing in Swiss Large White pigs
BMC Genomics
Swiss large white
Genetic diversity
Low-pass sequencing
Genotyping by sequencing
Key ancestor animals
author_facet Adéla Nosková
Meenu Bhati
Naveen Kumar Kadri
Danang Crysnanto
Stefan Neuenschwander
Andreas Hofer
Hubert Pausch
author_sort Adéla Nosková
title Characterization of a haplotype-reference panel for genotyping by low-pass sequencing in Swiss Large White pigs
title_short Characterization of a haplotype-reference panel for genotyping by low-pass sequencing in Swiss Large White pigs
title_full Characterization of a haplotype-reference panel for genotyping by low-pass sequencing in Swiss Large White pigs
title_fullStr Characterization of a haplotype-reference panel for genotyping by low-pass sequencing in Swiss Large White pigs
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of a haplotype-reference panel for genotyping by low-pass sequencing in Swiss Large White pigs
title_sort characterization of a haplotype-reference panel for genotyping by low-pass sequencing in swiss large white pigs
publisher BMC
series BMC Genomics
issn 1471-2164
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract Background The key-ancestor approach has been frequently applied to prioritize individuals for whole-genome sequencing based on their marginal genetic contribution to current populations. Using this approach, we selected 70 key ancestors from two lines of the Swiss Large White breed that have been selected divergently for fertility and fattening traits and sequenced their genomes with short paired-end reads. Results Using pedigree records, we estimated the effective population size of the dam and sire line to 72 and 44, respectively. In order to assess sequence variation in both lines, we sequenced the genomes of 70 boars at an average coverage of 16.69-fold. The boars explained 87.95 and 95.35% of the genetic diversity of the breeding populations of the dam and sire line, respectively. Reference-guided variant discovery using the GATK revealed 26,862,369 polymorphic sites. Principal component, admixture and fixation index (FST) analyses indicated considerable genetic differentiation between the lines. Genomic inbreeding quantified using runs of homozygosity was higher in the sire than dam line (0.28 vs 0.26). Using two complementary approaches, we detected 51 signatures of selection. However, only six signatures of selection overlapped between both lines. We used the sequenced haplotypes of the 70 key ancestors as a reference panel to call 22,618,811 genotypes in 175 pigs that had been sequenced at very low coverage (1.11-fold) using the GLIMPSE software. The genotype concordance, non-reference sensitivity and non-reference discrepancy between thus inferred and Illumina PorcineSNP60 BeadChip-called genotypes was 97.60, 98.73 and 3.24%, respectively. The low-pass sequencing-derived genomic relationship coefficients were highly correlated (r > 0.99) with those obtained from microarray genotyping. Conclusions We assessed genetic diversity within and between two lines of the Swiss Large White pig breed. Our analyses revealed considerable differentiation, even though the split into two populations occurred only few generations ago. The sequenced haplotypes of the key ancestor animals enabled us to implement genotyping by low-pass sequencing which offers an intriguing cost-effective approach to increase the variant density over current array-based genotyping by more than 350-fold.
topic Swiss large white
Genetic diversity
Low-pass sequencing
Genotyping by sequencing
Key ancestor animals
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-021-07610-5
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