Genomic inbreeding and selection signatures in the local dairy breed Icelandic Cattle

Summary Icelandic Cattle is the only dairy cattle breed native to Iceland. It currently numbers ca. 26 000 breeding females. We used 50k genotypes of over 8000 Icelandic Cattle to estimate genomic and pedigree‐based inbreeding and to detect selection signatures using the integrated haplotype score....

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Animal Genetics
Main Authors: Gautason, E., Schönherz, A. A., Sahana, G., Guldbrandtsen, B.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/age.13058
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/age.13058
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full-xml/10.1111/age.13058
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Summary:Summary Icelandic Cattle is the only dairy cattle breed native to Iceland. It currently numbers ca. 26 000 breeding females. We used 50k genotypes of over 8000 Icelandic Cattle to estimate genomic and pedigree‐based inbreeding and to detect selection signatures using the integrated haplotype score. We used 47 Icelandic bulls genotyped with a 770k SNP chip to estimate LD decay for comparison with other Nordic dairy cattle breeds. We detected ROHs on the autosomes and computed ROH‐based autosomal inbreeding coefficients. Average inbreeding coefficients according to pedigree and ROHs were 0.0621 and 0.101. Effective population sizes for the years 2009–2017 according to pedigree, ROHs, genomic relationship matrix, excess of homozygosity and individual increase in inbreeding were 81, 65, 60, 58 and 92 respectively. We identified three regions and six candidate genes that showed a signature of selection according to the integrated haplotype score ( P < 0.05) on chromosomes 1, 16 and 23. The LD structure of Icelandic Cattle is shaped by a long period of isolation and a small founder population. The estimate of LD at distances closer than 0.3 Mb is lower in Icelandic Cattle than in Danish Jersey, but is higher than in Danish Holstein and Red Nordic Dairy Cattle breeds. Our findings show that inbreeding rates in Icelandic Cattle currently are sustainable according to FAO guidelines, and our results do not indicate severe historical inbreeding.