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Genome-Wide Association Studies Associated with Backfat Thickness in Landrace and Yorkshire Pigs

Although pork quality traits are important commercially, genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have not well considered Landrace and Yorkshire pigs worldwide. Landrace and Yorkshire pigs are important pork-providing breeds. Although quantitative trait loci of pigs are well-developed, significant g...

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Autores principales: Lee, Young-Sup, Shin, Donghyun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Society of Gastrointestinal Intervention 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6187814/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30309204
http://dx.doi.org/10.5808/GI.2018.16.3.59
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author Lee, Young-Sup
Shin, Donghyun
author_facet Lee, Young-Sup
Shin, Donghyun
author_sort Lee, Young-Sup
collection PubMed
description Although pork quality traits are important commercially, genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have not well considered Landrace and Yorkshire pigs worldwide. Landrace and Yorkshire pigs are important pork-providing breeds. Although quantitative trait loci of pigs are well-developed, significant genes in GWASs of pigs in Korea must be studied. Through a GWAS using the PLINK program, study of the significant genes in Korean pigs was performed. We conducted a GWAS and surveyed the gene ontology (GO) terms associated with the backfat thickness (BF) trait of these pigs. We included the breed information (Yorkshire and Landrace pigs) as a covariate. The significant genes after false discovery rate (<0.01) correction were AFG1L, SCAI, RIMS1, and SPDEF. The major GO terms for the top 5% of genes were related to neuronal genes, cell morphogenesis and actin cytoskeleton organization. The neuronal genes were previously reported as being associated with backfat thickness. However, the genes in our results were novel, and they included ZNF280D, BAIAP2, LRTM2, GABRA5, PCDH15, HERC1, DTNBP1, SLIT2, TRAPPC9, NGFR, APBB2, RBPJ, and ABL2. These novel genes might have roles in important cellular and physiological functions related to BF accumulation. The genes related to cell morphogenesis were NOX4, MKLN1, ZNF280D, BAIAP2, DNAAF1, LRTM2, PCDH15, NGFR, RBPJ, MYH9, APBB2, DTNBP1, TRIM62, and SLIT2. The genes that belonged to actin cytoskeleton organization were MKLN1, BAIAP2, PCDH15, BCAS3, MYH9, DTNBP1, ABL2, ADD2, and SLIT2.
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spelling pubmed-61878142018-10-17 Genome-Wide Association Studies Associated with Backfat Thickness in Landrace and Yorkshire Pigs Lee, Young-Sup Shin, Donghyun Genomics Inform Original Article Although pork quality traits are important commercially, genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have not well considered Landrace and Yorkshire pigs worldwide. Landrace and Yorkshire pigs are important pork-providing breeds. Although quantitative trait loci of pigs are well-developed, significant genes in GWASs of pigs in Korea must be studied. Through a GWAS using the PLINK program, study of the significant genes in Korean pigs was performed. We conducted a GWAS and surveyed the gene ontology (GO) terms associated with the backfat thickness (BF) trait of these pigs. We included the breed information (Yorkshire and Landrace pigs) as a covariate. The significant genes after false discovery rate (<0.01) correction were AFG1L, SCAI, RIMS1, and SPDEF. The major GO terms for the top 5% of genes were related to neuronal genes, cell morphogenesis and actin cytoskeleton organization. The neuronal genes were previously reported as being associated with backfat thickness. However, the genes in our results were novel, and they included ZNF280D, BAIAP2, LRTM2, GABRA5, PCDH15, HERC1, DTNBP1, SLIT2, TRAPPC9, NGFR, APBB2, RBPJ, and ABL2. These novel genes might have roles in important cellular and physiological functions related to BF accumulation. The genes related to cell morphogenesis were NOX4, MKLN1, ZNF280D, BAIAP2, DNAAF1, LRTM2, PCDH15, NGFR, RBPJ, MYH9, APBB2, DTNBP1, TRIM62, and SLIT2. The genes that belonged to actin cytoskeleton organization were MKLN1, BAIAP2, PCDH15, BCAS3, MYH9, DTNBP1, ABL2, ADD2, and SLIT2. Society of Gastrointestinal Intervention 2018-09 2018-09-30 /pmc/articles/PMC6187814/ /pubmed/30309204 http://dx.doi.org/10.5808/GI.2018.16.3.59 Text en Copyright © 2018 by the Korea Genome Organization It is identical to the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Article
Lee, Young-Sup
Shin, Donghyun
Genome-Wide Association Studies Associated with Backfat Thickness in Landrace and Yorkshire Pigs
title Genome-Wide Association Studies Associated with Backfat Thickness in Landrace and Yorkshire Pigs
title_full Genome-Wide Association Studies Associated with Backfat Thickness in Landrace and Yorkshire Pigs
title_fullStr Genome-Wide Association Studies Associated with Backfat Thickness in Landrace and Yorkshire Pigs
title_full_unstemmed Genome-Wide Association Studies Associated with Backfat Thickness in Landrace and Yorkshire Pigs
title_short Genome-Wide Association Studies Associated with Backfat Thickness in Landrace and Yorkshire Pigs
title_sort genome-wide association studies associated with backfat thickness in landrace and yorkshire pigs
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6187814/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30309204
http://dx.doi.org/10.5808/GI.2018.16.3.59
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