Simulation of marker assisted selection strategies in beef cattle

Marker-assisted selection (MAS) has been presented as a promising tool for animal breeding, but its application in beef cattle is still very limited. The technology is still expensive and the way to combine molecular information with more traditional breeding strategies has not been well defined. In order to evaluate MAS strategies, a simulation study was conducted. A beef cattle herd was simulated, in which selection was practiced to improve weaning weight. Three molecular markers with effect on weaning weight explained 40% of the additive variance. Four strategies were compared: mass selection based on phenotypes, marker-assisted selection, selection with animal model (BLUP) and a combined strategy in which the phenotypes were corrected for the effect of the markers and then analyzed with an animal model. Molecular analysis was performed on a limited number of individuals and genotypes of the rest of the population were inferred by segregation analysis. Marker-based selection was the least effective option. Selection based on animal model and the combined strategy performed better than mass selection. Under the simulated conditions, the combined approach showed a slight advantage over the animal model (3% in years 6-8) that would be of little practical relevance. Still, the feasibility of integrating molecular and quantitative genetic information in a single strategy was confirmed. Further research should evaluate options to optimize both the number of markers and of animals to be genotyped.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Macor, Laura, Monterubbianesi, Maria Gloria, Corva, Pablo Marcelo
Format: Digital revista
Language:spa
Published: Asociacion Latinoamericana de Produccion Animal 2012
Online Access:https://ojs.alpa.uy/index.php/ojs_files/article/view/2225
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id oai:ojs.ojs.alpa.uy:article-2225
record_format ojs
spelling oai:ojs.ojs.alpa.uy:article-22252023-01-23T21:10:44Z Simulation of marker assisted selection strategies in beef cattle Macor, Laura Monterubbianesi, Maria Gloria Corva, Pablo Marcelo Beef cattle Marker assisted selection Simulation Weaning weight Marker-assisted selection (MAS) has been presented as a promising tool for animal breeding, but its application in beef cattle is still very limited. The technology is still expensive and the way to combine molecular information with more traditional breeding strategies has not been well defined. In order to evaluate MAS strategies, a simulation study was conducted. A beef cattle herd was simulated, in which selection was practiced to improve weaning weight. Three molecular markers with effect on weaning weight explained 40% of the additive variance. Four strategies were compared: mass selection based on phenotypes, marker-assisted selection, selection with animal model (BLUP) and a combined strategy in which the phenotypes were corrected for the effect of the markers and then analyzed with an animal model. Molecular analysis was performed on a limited number of individuals and genotypes of the rest of the population were inferred by segregation analysis. Marker-based selection was the least effective option. Selection based on animal model and the combined strategy performed better than mass selection. Under the simulated conditions, the combined approach showed a slight advantage over the animal model (3% in years 6-8) that would be of little practical relevance. Still, the feasibility of integrating molecular and quantitative genetic information in a single strategy was confirmed. Further research should evaluate options to optimize both the number of markers and of animals to be genotyped. Asociacion Latinoamericana de Produccion Animal 2012-06-20 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Articulo cientifico original Texto application/pdf https://ojs.alpa.uy/index.php/ojs_files/article/view/2225 Latin American Archives of Animal Production; Vol. 21 No. 1 (2013) Archivos Latinoamericanos de Producción Animal; Vol. 21 Núm. 1 (2013) 2075-8359 1022-1301 spa https://ojs.alpa.uy/index.php/ojs_files/article/view/2225/727
institution ALPA
collection OJS
country Uruguay
countrycode UY
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-alpa
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca ALPA
language spa
format Digital
author Macor, Laura
Monterubbianesi, Maria Gloria
Corva, Pablo Marcelo
spellingShingle Macor, Laura
Monterubbianesi, Maria Gloria
Corva, Pablo Marcelo
Simulation of marker assisted selection strategies in beef cattle
author_facet Macor, Laura
Monterubbianesi, Maria Gloria
Corva, Pablo Marcelo
author_sort Macor, Laura
title Simulation of marker assisted selection strategies in beef cattle
title_short Simulation of marker assisted selection strategies in beef cattle
title_full Simulation of marker assisted selection strategies in beef cattle
title_fullStr Simulation of marker assisted selection strategies in beef cattle
title_full_unstemmed Simulation of marker assisted selection strategies in beef cattle
title_sort simulation of marker assisted selection strategies in beef cattle
description Marker-assisted selection (MAS) has been presented as a promising tool for animal breeding, but its application in beef cattle is still very limited. The technology is still expensive and the way to combine molecular information with more traditional breeding strategies has not been well defined. In order to evaluate MAS strategies, a simulation study was conducted. A beef cattle herd was simulated, in which selection was practiced to improve weaning weight. Three molecular markers with effect on weaning weight explained 40% of the additive variance. Four strategies were compared: mass selection based on phenotypes, marker-assisted selection, selection with animal model (BLUP) and a combined strategy in which the phenotypes were corrected for the effect of the markers and then analyzed with an animal model. Molecular analysis was performed on a limited number of individuals and genotypes of the rest of the population were inferred by segregation analysis. Marker-based selection was the least effective option. Selection based on animal model and the combined strategy performed better than mass selection. Under the simulated conditions, the combined approach showed a slight advantage over the animal model (3% in years 6-8) that would be of little practical relevance. Still, the feasibility of integrating molecular and quantitative genetic information in a single strategy was confirmed. Further research should evaluate options to optimize both the number of markers and of animals to be genotyped.
publisher Asociacion Latinoamericana de Produccion Animal
publishDate 2012
url https://ojs.alpa.uy/index.php/ojs_files/article/view/2225
work_keys_str_mv AT macorlaura simulationofmarkerassistedselectionstrategiesinbeefcattle
AT monterubbianesimariagloria simulationofmarkerassistedselectionstrategiesinbeefcattle
AT corvapablomarcelo simulationofmarkerassistedselectionstrategiesinbeefcattle
_version_ 1755914923815206912