Genome wide association and genomic prediction for growth traits in juvenile farmed Atlantic salmon using a high density SNP array

Abstract Background The genetic architecture of complex traits in farmed animal populations is of interest from a scientific and practical perspective. The use of genetic markers to predict the genetic merit (breeding values) of individuals is commonplace in modern farm animal breeding schemes. Rece...

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Main Authors: Tsai, Hsin-Yuan, Hamilton, Alastair, Tinch, Alan, Guy, Derrick, Gharbi, Karim, Stear, Michael, Matika, Oswald, Bishop, Steve, Houston, Ross
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BioMed Central Ltd. 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/16/969
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spelling ftbiomed:oai:biomedcentral.com:s12864-015-2117-9 2023-05-15T15:30:13+02:00 Genome wide association and genomic prediction for growth traits in juvenile farmed Atlantic salmon using a high density SNP array Tsai, Hsin-Yuan Hamilton, Alastair Tinch, Alan Guy, Derrick Gharbi, Karim Stear, Michael Matika, Oswald Bishop, Steve Houston, Ross 2015-11-18 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/16/969 en eng BioMed Central Ltd. http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/16/969 Copyright 2015 Tsai et al. Atlantic salmon GWAS Genomic-wide association analysis Genomic prediction Growth Research article 2015 ftbiomed 2015-11-29T01:11:21Z Abstract Background The genetic architecture of complex traits in farmed animal populations is of interest from a scientific and practical perspective. The use of genetic markers to predict the genetic merit (breeding values) of individuals is commonplace in modern farm animal breeding schemes. Recently, high density SNP arrays have become available for Atlantic salmon, which facilitates genomic prediction and association studies using genome-wide markers and economically important traits. The aims of this study were (i) to use a high density SNP array to investigate the genetic architecture of weight and length in juvenile Atlantic salmon; (ii) to assess the utility of genomic prediction for these traits, including testing different marker densities; (iii) to identify potential candidate genes underpinning variation in early growth. Results A pedigreed population of farmed Atlantic salmon ( n = 622) were measured for weight and length traits at one year of age, and genotyped for 111,908 segregating SNP markers using a high density SNP array. The heritability of both traits was estimated using pedigree and genomic relationship matrices, and was comparable at around 0.5 and 0.6 respectively. The results of the GWA analysis pointed to a polygenic genetic architecture, with no SNPs surpassing the genome-wide significance threshold, and one SNP associated with length at the chromosome-wide level. SNPs surpassing an arbitrary threshold of significance ( P < 0.005, ~ top 0.5 % of markers) were aligned to an Atlantic salmon reference transcriptome, identifying 109 SNPs in transcribed regions that were annotated by alignment to human, mouse and zebrafish protein databases. Prediction of breeding values was more accurate when applying genomic (GBLUP) than pedigree (PBLUP) relationship matrices (accuracy ~ 0.7 and 0.58 respectively) and 5,000 SNPs were sufficient for obtaining this accuracy increase over PBLUP in this specific population. Conclusions The high density SNP array can effectively capture the additive genetic variation in complex traits. However, the traits of weight and length both appear to be very polygenic with only one SNP surpassing the chromosome-wide threshold. Genomic prediction using the array is effective, leading to an improvement in accuracy compared to pedigree methods, and this improvement can be achieved with only a small subset of the markers in this population. The results have practical relevance for genomic selection in . Article in Journal/Newspaper Atlantic salmon BioMed Central
institution Open Polar
collection BioMed Central
op_collection_id ftbiomed
language English
topic Atlantic salmon
GWAS
Genomic-wide association analysis
Genomic prediction
Growth
spellingShingle Atlantic salmon
GWAS
Genomic-wide association analysis
Genomic prediction
Growth
Tsai, Hsin-Yuan
Hamilton, Alastair
Tinch, Alan
Guy, Derrick
Gharbi, Karim
Stear, Michael
Matika, Oswald
Bishop, Steve
Houston, Ross
Genome wide association and genomic prediction for growth traits in juvenile farmed Atlantic salmon using a high density SNP array
topic_facet Atlantic salmon
GWAS
Genomic-wide association analysis
Genomic prediction
Growth
description Abstract Background The genetic architecture of complex traits in farmed animal populations is of interest from a scientific and practical perspective. The use of genetic markers to predict the genetic merit (breeding values) of individuals is commonplace in modern farm animal breeding schemes. Recently, high density SNP arrays have become available for Atlantic salmon, which facilitates genomic prediction and association studies using genome-wide markers and economically important traits. The aims of this study were (i) to use a high density SNP array to investigate the genetic architecture of weight and length in juvenile Atlantic salmon; (ii) to assess the utility of genomic prediction for these traits, including testing different marker densities; (iii) to identify potential candidate genes underpinning variation in early growth. Results A pedigreed population of farmed Atlantic salmon ( n = 622) were measured for weight and length traits at one year of age, and genotyped for 111,908 segregating SNP markers using a high density SNP array. The heritability of both traits was estimated using pedigree and genomic relationship matrices, and was comparable at around 0.5 and 0.6 respectively. The results of the GWA analysis pointed to a polygenic genetic architecture, with no SNPs surpassing the genome-wide significance threshold, and one SNP associated with length at the chromosome-wide level. SNPs surpassing an arbitrary threshold of significance ( P < 0.005, ~ top 0.5 % of markers) were aligned to an Atlantic salmon reference transcriptome, identifying 109 SNPs in transcribed regions that were annotated by alignment to human, mouse and zebrafish protein databases. Prediction of breeding values was more accurate when applying genomic (GBLUP) than pedigree (PBLUP) relationship matrices (accuracy ~ 0.7 and 0.58 respectively) and 5,000 SNPs were sufficient for obtaining this accuracy increase over PBLUP in this specific population. Conclusions The high density SNP array can effectively capture the additive genetic variation in complex traits. However, the traits of weight and length both appear to be very polygenic with only one SNP surpassing the chromosome-wide threshold. Genomic prediction using the array is effective, leading to an improvement in accuracy compared to pedigree methods, and this improvement can be achieved with only a small subset of the markers in this population. The results have practical relevance for genomic selection in .
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Tsai, Hsin-Yuan
Hamilton, Alastair
Tinch, Alan
Guy, Derrick
Gharbi, Karim
Stear, Michael
Matika, Oswald
Bishop, Steve
Houston, Ross
author_facet Tsai, Hsin-Yuan
Hamilton, Alastair
Tinch, Alan
Guy, Derrick
Gharbi, Karim
Stear, Michael
Matika, Oswald
Bishop, Steve
Houston, Ross
author_sort Tsai, Hsin-Yuan
title Genome wide association and genomic prediction for growth traits in juvenile farmed Atlantic salmon using a high density SNP array
title_short Genome wide association and genomic prediction for growth traits in juvenile farmed Atlantic salmon using a high density SNP array
title_full Genome wide association and genomic prediction for growth traits in juvenile farmed Atlantic salmon using a high density SNP array
title_fullStr Genome wide association and genomic prediction for growth traits in juvenile farmed Atlantic salmon using a high density SNP array
title_full_unstemmed Genome wide association and genomic prediction for growth traits in juvenile farmed Atlantic salmon using a high density SNP array
title_sort genome wide association and genomic prediction for growth traits in juvenile farmed atlantic salmon using a high density snp array
publisher BioMed Central Ltd.
publishDate 2015
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/16/969
genre Atlantic salmon
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
op_relation http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/16/969
op_rights Copyright 2015 Tsai et al.
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