Across-country genetic and genomic analyses of foot score traits in American and Australian Angus cattle

Title
Across-country genetic and genomic analyses of foot score traits in American and Australian Angus cattle
Publication Date
2023-11-02
Author(s)
Alvarenga, Amanda B
Retallick, Kelli J
Garcia, Andre
Miller, Stephen P
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5273-352X
Email: smille66@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:smille66
Byrne, Andrew
Oliveira, Hinayah R
Brito, Luiz F
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
BioMed Central Ltd
Place of publication
United Kingdom
DOI
10.1186/s12711-023-00850-x
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/69896
Abstract

Background Hoof structure and health are essential for the welfare and productivity of beef cattle. Therefore, we assessed the genetic and genomic background of foot score traits in American (US) and Australian (AU) Angus cattle and investigated the feasibility of performing genomic evaluations combining data for foot score traits recorded in US and AU Angus cattle. The traits evaluated were foot angle (FA) and claw set (CS). In total, 109,294 and ~1.12 million animals had phenotypic and genomic information, respectively. Four sets of analyses were performed: (1) genomic connectedness between US and AU Angus cattle populations and population structure, (2) estimation of genetic parameters, (3) single-step genomic prediction of breeding values, and (4) single-step genome-wide association studies for FA and CS.

Results There was no clear genetic differentiation between US and AU Angus populations. Similar heritability estimates (FA: 0.22–0.24 and CS: 0.22–0.27) and moderate-to-high genetic correlations between US and AU foot scores (FA: 0.61 and CS: 0.76) were obtained. A joint-genomic prediction using data from both populations outperformed within-country genomic evaluations. A genomic prediction model considering US and AU datasets as a single population performed similarly to the scenario accounting for genotype-by-environment interactions (i.e., multiple-trait model considering US and AU records as different traits), even though the genetic correlations between countries were lower than 0.80. Common signifcant genomic regions were observed between US and AU for FA and CS. Signifcant single nucleotide polymorphisms were identifed on the Bos taurus (BTA) chromosomes BTA1, BTA5, BTA11, BTA13, BTA19, BTA20, and BTA23. The candidate genes identified were primarily from growth factor gene families, including FGF12 and GDF5, which were previously associated with bone structure and repair.

Conclusions This study presents comprehensive population structure and genetic and genomic analyses of foot scores in US and AU Angus cattle populations, which are essential for optimizing the implementation of genomic selection for improved foot scores in Angus cattle breeding programs. We have also identified candidate genes associated with foot scores in the largest Angus cattle populations in the world and made recommendations for genomic evaluations for improved foot score traits in the US and AU.

Link
Citation
Genetics Selection Evolution, v.55, p. 1-19
ISSN
1297-9686
0999-193X
Start page
1
End page
19
Rights
Attribution 4.0 International

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