A comparison between the use of pedigree or genomic relationships to control inbreeding in optimum-contribution selection

Author(s)
Sharif-Islam, M
Henryon, M
Van Der Werf, J H J
Sørensen, A C
Chu, T T
Wood, B J
Hermesch, S
Publication Date
2023-07-26
Abstract
<p>Stochastic simulation was used to test the hypothesis that optimum-contribution selection with genomic relationships using marker loci with low minor allele frequency (MAF) below a predefined threshold (referred as TGOCS) to control inbreeding maintained more genetic variation than pedigree relationships (POCS) at the same rate of true genetic gain (∆<i>G</i><sub><i>true</i></sub>). Criteria to measure genetic variation were the number of segregating QTL loci (quantitative trait loci) and the average number of founder alleles per locus. Marker alleles having a MAF below 0.025 were used in forming the genomic relationships in TGOCS strategy. For centering in establishing genomic relationships, when the allele frequency of marker loci with low MAF set to 0.5 the TGOCS strategy maintained 66% fewer founder alleles than POCS and there were 30% fewer QTL segregating. This TGOCS strategy maintained 61% fewer founder alleles than GOCS and 28% fewer segregating QTL loci. When the allele frequency of marker loci with low MAF was set to observed allele frequency these figures were 8%, 2%, 5% and 2%, respectively. Using marker loci with low MAF in the TGOCS strategy was inferior to both GOCS and POCS. Both TGOCS and GOCS were affected by the same constraint that is LD (linkage disequilibrium) between markers and QTL. Therefore, POCS is a more efficient method to maintain genetic variation in the population until a better way to use genomic information in optimum-contribution selection is identified.</p>
Citation
Proceedings of the Association for the Advancement of Animal Breeding and Genetics, v.25, p. 190-193
ISSN
1328-3227
Link
Publisher
Association for the Advancement of Animal Breeding and Genetics (AAABG)
Title
A comparison between the use of pedigree or genomic relationships to control inbreeding in optimum-contribution selection
Type of document
Conference Publication
Entity Type
Publication

Files:

NameSizeformatDescriptionLink