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A comparison of two methods for prediction of response and rates of inbreeding in selected populations with the results obtained in two selection experiments

Selection programmes are mainly concerned with increasing genetic gain. However, short-term progress should not be obtained at the expense of the within-population genetic variability. Different prediction models for the evolution within a small population of the genetic mean of a selected trait, it...

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Autores principales: Loywyck, Valérie, Bijma, Piter, Laan, Marie-Hélène Pinard-van der, van Arendonk, Johan, Verrier, Etienne
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2697235/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15823236
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1297-9686-37-4-273
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author Loywyck, Valérie
Bijma, Piter
Laan, Marie-Hélène Pinard-van der
van Arendonk, Johan
Verrier, Etienne
author_facet Loywyck, Valérie
Bijma, Piter
Laan, Marie-Hélène Pinard-van der
van Arendonk, Johan
Verrier, Etienne
author_sort Loywyck, Valérie
collection PubMed
description Selection programmes are mainly concerned with increasing genetic gain. However, short-term progress should not be obtained at the expense of the within-population genetic variability. Different prediction models for the evolution within a small population of the genetic mean of a selected trait, its genetic variance and its inbreeding have been developed but have mainly been validated through Monte Carlo simulation studies. The purpose of this study was to compare theoretical predictions to experimental results. Two deterministic methods were considered, both grounded on a polygenic additive model. Differences between theoretical predictions and experimental results arise from differences between the true and the assumed genetic model, and from mathematical simplifications applied in the prediction methods. Two sets of experimental lines of chickens were used in this study: the Dutch lines undergoing true truncation mass selection, the other lines (French) undergoing mass selection with a restriction on the representation of the different families. This study confirmed, on an experimental basis, that modelling is an efficient approach to make useful predictions of the evolution of selected populations although the basic assumptions considered in the models (polygenic additive model, normality of the distribution, base population at the equilibrium, etc.) are not met in reality. The two deterministic methods compared yielded results that were close to those observed in real data, especially when the selection scheme followed the rules of strict mass selection: for instance, both predictions overestimated the genetic gain in the French experiment, whereas both predictions were close to the observed values in the Dutch experiment.
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spelling pubmed-26972352009-06-16 A comparison of two methods for prediction of response and rates of inbreeding in selected populations with the results obtained in two selection experiments Loywyck, Valérie Bijma, Piter Laan, Marie-Hélène Pinard-van der van Arendonk, Johan Verrier, Etienne Genet Sel Evol Research Selection programmes are mainly concerned with increasing genetic gain. However, short-term progress should not be obtained at the expense of the within-population genetic variability. Different prediction models for the evolution within a small population of the genetic mean of a selected trait, its genetic variance and its inbreeding have been developed but have mainly been validated through Monte Carlo simulation studies. The purpose of this study was to compare theoretical predictions to experimental results. Two deterministic methods were considered, both grounded on a polygenic additive model. Differences between theoretical predictions and experimental results arise from differences between the true and the assumed genetic model, and from mathematical simplifications applied in the prediction methods. Two sets of experimental lines of chickens were used in this study: the Dutch lines undergoing true truncation mass selection, the other lines (French) undergoing mass selection with a restriction on the representation of the different families. This study confirmed, on an experimental basis, that modelling is an efficient approach to make useful predictions of the evolution of selected populations although the basic assumptions considered in the models (polygenic additive model, normality of the distribution, base population at the equilibrium, etc.) are not met in reality. The two deterministic methods compared yielded results that were close to those observed in real data, especially when the selection scheme followed the rules of strict mass selection: for instance, both predictions overestimated the genetic gain in the French experiment, whereas both predictions were close to the observed values in the Dutch experiment. BioMed Central 2005-05-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2697235/ /pubmed/15823236 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1297-9686-37-4-273 Text en Copyright © 2005 INRA, EDP Sciences
spellingShingle Research
Loywyck, Valérie
Bijma, Piter
Laan, Marie-Hélène Pinard-van der
van Arendonk, Johan
Verrier, Etienne
A comparison of two methods for prediction of response and rates of inbreeding in selected populations with the results obtained in two selection experiments
title A comparison of two methods for prediction of response and rates of inbreeding in selected populations with the results obtained in two selection experiments
title_full A comparison of two methods for prediction of response and rates of inbreeding in selected populations with the results obtained in two selection experiments
title_fullStr A comparison of two methods for prediction of response and rates of inbreeding in selected populations with the results obtained in two selection experiments
title_full_unstemmed A comparison of two methods for prediction of response and rates of inbreeding in selected populations with the results obtained in two selection experiments
title_short A comparison of two methods for prediction of response and rates of inbreeding in selected populations with the results obtained in two selection experiments
title_sort comparison of two methods for prediction of response and rates of inbreeding in selected populations with the results obtained in two selection experiments
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2697235/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15823236
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1297-9686-37-4-273
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