How old are quantitative trait loci and how widely do they segregate?

Summary The mutations that cause genetic variation in quantitative traits could be old and segregate across many breeds or they could be young and segregate only within one breed. This has implications for our understanding of the evolution of quantitative traits and for genomic prediction to improve livestock. We investigated the age of quantitative trait loci (QTL) for milk production traits identified as segregating in Holstein dairy cattle. We use a multitrait method and found that six of 11 QTL also segregate in Jerseys. Variants identified as Holstein‐only QTL were fixed or rare [minor allele frequency (MAF) < 0.05] in Jersey. The age of the QTL mutations appears to vary from perhaps 2000 to 50 000 generations old. The older QTL tend to have high derived allele frequencies and often segregate across both breeds. Holstein‐only QTL were often embedded within longer haplotypes, supporting the conclusion that they are typically younger mutations that have occurred more recently than QTL that segregate in both breeds. A reference population for genomic prediction using both Holsteins and Jersey cattle incorrectly predicted a QTL in Jersey cattle when the QTL only segregates in Holsteins. Overcoming this error should help to make genomic prediction more accurate in smaller breeds.
Source: Journal of Animal Breeding and Genetics - Category: Genetics & Stem Cells Authors: Tags: Original Article Source Type: research
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