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Genomic mating as sustainable breeding for Chinese indigenous Ningxiang pigs

An important economic reason for the loss of local breeds is that they tend to be less productive, and hence having less market value than commercial breeds. Nevertheless, local breeds often have irreplaceable values, genetically and sociologically. In the breeding programs with local breeds, it is...

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Autores principales: He, Jun, Wu, Xiao-Lin, Zeng, Qinghua, Li, Hao, Ma, Haiming, Jiang, Juan, Rosa, Guilherme J. M., Gianola, Daniel, Tait Jr., Richard G., Bauck, Stewart
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7428355/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32797113
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236629
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author He, Jun
Wu, Xiao-Lin
Zeng, Qinghua
Li, Hao
Ma, Haiming
Jiang, Juan
Rosa, Guilherme J. M.
Gianola, Daniel
Tait Jr., Richard G.
Bauck, Stewart
author_facet He, Jun
Wu, Xiao-Lin
Zeng, Qinghua
Li, Hao
Ma, Haiming
Jiang, Juan
Rosa, Guilherme J. M.
Gianola, Daniel
Tait Jr., Richard G.
Bauck, Stewart
author_sort He, Jun
collection PubMed
description An important economic reason for the loss of local breeds is that they tend to be less productive, and hence having less market value than commercial breeds. Nevertheless, local breeds often have irreplaceable values, genetically and sociologically. In the breeding programs with local breeds, it is crucial to balance the selection for genetic gain and the maintaining of genetic diversity. These two objectives are often conflicting, and finding the optimal point of the trade-off has been a challenge for breeders. Genomic selection (GS) provides a revolutionary tool for the genetic improvement of farm animals. At the same time, it can increase inbreeding and produce a more rapid depletion of genetic variability of the selected traits in future generations. Optimum-contribution selection (OCS) represents an approach to maximize genetic gain while constraining inbreeding within a targeted range. In the present study, 515 Ningxiang pigs were genotyped with the Illumina Porcine SNP60 array or the GeneSeek Genomic Profiler Porcine 50K array. The Ningxiang pigs were found to be highly inbred at the genomic level. Average locus-wise inbreeding coefficients were 0.41 and 0.37 for the two SNP arrays used, whereas genomic inbreeding coefficients based on runs of homozygosity were 0.24 and 0.25, respectively. Simulated phenotypic data were used to assess the utility of genomic OCS (GOCS) in comparison with GS without inbreeding control. GOCS was conducted under two scenarios, selecting sires only (GOCS_S) or selecting sires and dams (GOCS_SD), while kinships were constrained on selected parents. The genetic gain for average daily body weight gain (ADG) per generation was between 18.99 and 20.55 g with GOCS_S, and between 23.20 and 28.92 with GOCS_SD, and it varied from 25.38 to 48.38 g under GS without controlling inbreeding. While the rate of genetic gain per generation obtained using GS was substantially larger than that obtained by the two scenarios of genomic OCS in the beginning generations of selection, the difference in the genetic gain of ADG between GS and GOCS reduced quickly in latter generations. At generation ten, the difference in the realized rates of genetic gain between GS and GOCS_SD diminished and ended up with even a slightly higher genetic gain with GOCS_SD, due to the rapid loss of genetic variance with GS and fixation of causative genes. The rate of inbreeding was mostly maintained below 5% per generation with genomic OCS, whereas it increased to between 10.5% and 15.3% per generation with GS. Therefore, genomic OCS appears to be a sustainable strategy for the genetic improvement of local breeds such as Ningxiang pigs, but keeping mind that a variety of GOCS methods exist and the optimal forms remain to be exploited further.
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spelling pubmed-74283552020-08-20 Genomic mating as sustainable breeding for Chinese indigenous Ningxiang pigs He, Jun Wu, Xiao-Lin Zeng, Qinghua Li, Hao Ma, Haiming Jiang, Juan Rosa, Guilherme J. M. Gianola, Daniel Tait Jr., Richard G. Bauck, Stewart PLoS One Research Article An important economic reason for the loss of local breeds is that they tend to be less productive, and hence having less market value than commercial breeds. Nevertheless, local breeds often have irreplaceable values, genetically and sociologically. In the breeding programs with local breeds, it is crucial to balance the selection for genetic gain and the maintaining of genetic diversity. These two objectives are often conflicting, and finding the optimal point of the trade-off has been a challenge for breeders. Genomic selection (GS) provides a revolutionary tool for the genetic improvement of farm animals. At the same time, it can increase inbreeding and produce a more rapid depletion of genetic variability of the selected traits in future generations. Optimum-contribution selection (OCS) represents an approach to maximize genetic gain while constraining inbreeding within a targeted range. In the present study, 515 Ningxiang pigs were genotyped with the Illumina Porcine SNP60 array or the GeneSeek Genomic Profiler Porcine 50K array. The Ningxiang pigs were found to be highly inbred at the genomic level. Average locus-wise inbreeding coefficients were 0.41 and 0.37 for the two SNP arrays used, whereas genomic inbreeding coefficients based on runs of homozygosity were 0.24 and 0.25, respectively. Simulated phenotypic data were used to assess the utility of genomic OCS (GOCS) in comparison with GS without inbreeding control. GOCS was conducted under two scenarios, selecting sires only (GOCS_S) or selecting sires and dams (GOCS_SD), while kinships were constrained on selected parents. The genetic gain for average daily body weight gain (ADG) per generation was between 18.99 and 20.55 g with GOCS_S, and between 23.20 and 28.92 with GOCS_SD, and it varied from 25.38 to 48.38 g under GS without controlling inbreeding. While the rate of genetic gain per generation obtained using GS was substantially larger than that obtained by the two scenarios of genomic OCS in the beginning generations of selection, the difference in the genetic gain of ADG between GS and GOCS reduced quickly in latter generations. At generation ten, the difference in the realized rates of genetic gain between GS and GOCS_SD diminished and ended up with even a slightly higher genetic gain with GOCS_SD, due to the rapid loss of genetic variance with GS and fixation of causative genes. The rate of inbreeding was mostly maintained below 5% per generation with genomic OCS, whereas it increased to between 10.5% and 15.3% per generation with GS. Therefore, genomic OCS appears to be a sustainable strategy for the genetic improvement of local breeds such as Ningxiang pigs, but keeping mind that a variety of GOCS methods exist and the optimal forms remain to be exploited further. Public Library of Science 2020-08-14 /pmc/articles/PMC7428355/ /pubmed/32797113 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236629 Text en © 2020 He et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
He, Jun
Wu, Xiao-Lin
Zeng, Qinghua
Li, Hao
Ma, Haiming
Jiang, Juan
Rosa, Guilherme J. M.
Gianola, Daniel
Tait Jr., Richard G.
Bauck, Stewart
Genomic mating as sustainable breeding for Chinese indigenous Ningxiang pigs
title Genomic mating as sustainable breeding for Chinese indigenous Ningxiang pigs
title_full Genomic mating as sustainable breeding for Chinese indigenous Ningxiang pigs
title_fullStr Genomic mating as sustainable breeding for Chinese indigenous Ningxiang pigs
title_full_unstemmed Genomic mating as sustainable breeding for Chinese indigenous Ningxiang pigs
title_short Genomic mating as sustainable breeding for Chinese indigenous Ningxiang pigs
title_sort genomic mating as sustainable breeding for chinese indigenous ningxiang pigs
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7428355/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32797113
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236629
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