J. B. COLE,1,* P.M. VANRADEN,* J.R. O'CONNELL,† C. P. VAN TASSELL,*,‡ T.S. SONSTEGARD,‡ R.D. SCHNABEL,§ J.F. TAYLOR, § and G.R. WIGGANS*
*Animal Improvement Programs and
‡Bovine Functional Genomics Laboratories, Agricultural
Research Service, USDA, Beltsville, MD 20705-2350
University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD,
USA
§University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, USA
2008 J. Dairy Sci. (?)
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Genetic effects for many dairy traits and for total economic merit are fairly evenly distributed across all chromosomes. A high-density scan using 38,416 SNP markers for 5,285 bulls confirmed two previously-known major genes on Bos taurus autosomes (BTA) 6 and 14 but revealed few other large effects. Markers on BTA18 had the largest effects on calving ease, several conformation traits, longevity, and total merit. Prediction accuracy was highest using a heavy-tailed prior assuming that each marker had an effect on each trait, rather than assuming a normal distribution of effects as in a linear model, or that only some loci have nonzero effects. A prior model combining heavy tails with finite alleles produced results that were intermediate compared to those two individual models. Differences between models were small (1 to 2%) for traits with no major genes, and larger for heavy tails with traits having known QTL (6 to 8%). Analysis of bull recessive codes suggested that marker effects from genomic selection may be used to identify regions of chromosomes to search in detail for candidate genes, but individual SNP were not tracking causative mutations with the exception of DGAT. Distributions of BTA14-specific EBV showed that selection primarily for milk yield has not changed the distribution of EBV for fat percentage even in the presence of a known QTL. Chromosomal EBV may also be useful for identifying complementary mates in breeding programs. The QTL affecting dystocia, conformation, and economic merit on BTA18 appears to be related to calf size or birthweight, and may be the result of longer gestation lengths. Results validate quantitative genetic assumptions that most traits are due to the contributions of a large number of genes of small additive effect, rather than support the finite locus model.
(Key words: calving traits, genomic selection, single nucleotide polymorphism, quantitative trait loci)