Bos taurus breed:Multiple Raw sequence reads

The common management practice of manually removing horns from cattle is an increasing animal welfare concern for consumers. Utilizing currently available polled (hornless) genetics to create fewer horned animals would take many generations since existing polled sires are primarily heterozygous animals with lower genetic merit than horned sires. An alternative strategy is to utilize gene editing technology to incorporate the polled allele into elite genetic backgrounds. Two gene edited polled bulls were created using TALENs (Carlson et al., 2016). One of these bulls was bred to Horned Hereford cows to evaluate the transmission of the polled allele to offspring. Six calves (1 female, 5 males) were born, heterozygous for the polled allele and lacking horns. Whole genome sequence reads for these animals are included, as well as sequences for purebred Horned Hereford and Hereford x Holstein contemporary controls. The long-term goals of this project are to provide empirical data on the phenotypic and genotypic durability of the polled genome edited trait, the health and development of offspring from genome edited animals, and the composition of animal products derived from the offspring of a genome edited bull and control bulls. This research will further our understanding of any novel risks associated with the use of genome editing in livestock.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: University of California, Davis (18794905)
Format: Dataset biblioteca
Published: 2018
Subjects:Genetics, Bos taurus, eEukaryotes, raw sequence reads,
Online Access:https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Bos_taurus_breed_Multiple_Raw_sequence_reads/25083713
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id dat-usda-us-article25083713
record_format figshare
spelling dat-usda-us-article250837132018-10-02T00:00:00Z Bos taurus breed:Multiple Raw sequence reads University of California, Davis (18794905) Genetics Bos taurus eEukaryotes raw sequence reads The common management practice of manually removing horns from cattle is an increasing animal welfare concern for consumers. Utilizing currently available polled (hornless) genetics to create fewer horned animals would take many generations since existing polled sires are primarily heterozygous animals with lower genetic merit than horned sires. An alternative strategy is to utilize gene editing technology to incorporate the polled allele into elite genetic backgrounds. Two gene edited polled bulls were created using TALENs (Carlson et al., 2016). One of these bulls was bred to Horned Hereford cows to evaluate the transmission of the polled allele to offspring. Six calves (1 female, 5 males) were born, heterozygous for the polled allele and lacking horns. Whole genome sequence reads for these animals are included, as well as sequences for purebred Horned Hereford and Hereford x Holstein contemporary controls. The long-term goals of this project are to provide empirical data on the phenotypic and genotypic durability of the polled genome edited trait, the health and development of offspring from genome edited animals, and the composition of animal products derived from the offspring of a genome edited bull and control bulls. This research will further our understanding of any novel risks associated with the use of genome editing in livestock. 2018-10-02T00:00:00Z Dataset Dataset 10113/AF25083713 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Bos_taurus_breed_Multiple_Raw_sequence_reads/25083713 Copyright Undetermined
institution USDA US
collection Figshare
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Datos de investigación
access En linea
databasecode dat-usda-us
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname National Agricultural Library of USDA
topic Genetics
Bos taurus
eEukaryotes
raw sequence reads
spellingShingle Genetics
Bos taurus
eEukaryotes
raw sequence reads
University of California, Davis (18794905)
Bos taurus breed:Multiple Raw sequence reads
description The common management practice of manually removing horns from cattle is an increasing animal welfare concern for consumers. Utilizing currently available polled (hornless) genetics to create fewer horned animals would take many generations since existing polled sires are primarily heterozygous animals with lower genetic merit than horned sires. An alternative strategy is to utilize gene editing technology to incorporate the polled allele into elite genetic backgrounds. Two gene edited polled bulls were created using TALENs (Carlson et al., 2016). One of these bulls was bred to Horned Hereford cows to evaluate the transmission of the polled allele to offspring. Six calves (1 female, 5 males) were born, heterozygous for the polled allele and lacking horns. Whole genome sequence reads for these animals are included, as well as sequences for purebred Horned Hereford and Hereford x Holstein contemporary controls. The long-term goals of this project are to provide empirical data on the phenotypic and genotypic durability of the polled genome edited trait, the health and development of offspring from genome edited animals, and the composition of animal products derived from the offspring of a genome edited bull and control bulls. This research will further our understanding of any novel risks associated with the use of genome editing in livestock.
format Dataset
author University of California, Davis (18794905)
author_facet University of California, Davis (18794905)
author_sort University of California, Davis (18794905)
title Bos taurus breed:Multiple Raw sequence reads
title_short Bos taurus breed:Multiple Raw sequence reads
title_full Bos taurus breed:Multiple Raw sequence reads
title_fullStr Bos taurus breed:Multiple Raw sequence reads
title_full_unstemmed Bos taurus breed:Multiple Raw sequence reads
title_sort bos taurus breed:multiple raw sequence reads
publishDate 2018
url https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Bos_taurus_breed_Multiple_Raw_sequence_reads/25083713
work_keys_str_mv AT universityofcaliforniadavis18794905 bostaurusbreedmultiplerawsequencereads
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