Development of a SNP panel dedicated to parentage assignment in French sheep populations

Abstract Background The efficiency of breeding programs partly relies on the accuracy of the estimated breeding values which decreases when pedigrees are incomplete. Two reproduction techniques are mainly used by sheep breeders to identify the sires of lambs: animal insemination and natural matings...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: F. Tortereau, C. R. Moreno, G. Tosser-Klopp, B. Servin, J. Raoul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-05-01
Series:BMC Genetics
Subjects:
SNP
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12863-017-0518-2
id doaj-06f3cb0f42f04670b5ce3cc53a5e24c3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-06f3cb0f42f04670b5ce3cc53a5e24c32020-11-25T03:12:00ZengBMCBMC Genetics1471-21562017-05-0118111110.1186/s12863-017-0518-2Development of a SNP panel dedicated to parentage assignment in French sheep populationsF. Tortereau0C. R. Moreno1G. Tosser-Klopp2B. Servin3J. Raoul4GenPhySE, INRA, INPT, INP-ENVT, Université de ToulouseGenPhySE, INRA, INPT, INP-ENVT, Université de ToulouseGenPhySE, INRA, INPT, INP-ENVT, Université de ToulouseGenPhySE, INRA, INPT, INP-ENVT, Université de ToulouseInstitut de l’Elevage, DGEPAbstract Background The efficiency of breeding programs partly relies on the accuracy of the estimated breeding values which decreases when pedigrees are incomplete. Two reproduction techniques are mainly used by sheep breeders to identify the sires of lambs: animal insemination and natural matings with a single ram per group of ewes. Both methods have major drawbacks, notably time-consuming tasks for breeders, and are thus used at varying levels in breeding programs. As a consequence, the percentage of known sires can be very low in some breeds and results in less accurate estimated breeding values. Results In order to address this issue and offer an alternative strategy for obtaining parentage information, we designed a set of 249 SNPs for parentage assignment in French sheep breeds and tested its efficiency in one breed. The set was derived from the 54 K SNP chip that was used to genotype the thirty main French sheep populations. Only SNPs in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, displaying the highest Minor Allele Frequency across all the thirty populations and not associated with Mendelian errors in verified family trios were selected. The panel of 249 SNPs was successfully used in an on-farm test in the BMC breed and resulted in more than 95% of lambs being assigned to a unique sire. Conclusion In this study we developed a SNP panel for assignment that achieved good results in the on-farm testing. We also raised some conditions for optimal use of this panel: at least 180 SNPs should be used and a minute preparation of the list of candidate sires. Our panel also displays high levels of MAF in the SheepHapMap breeds, particularly in the South West European breeds.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12863-017-0518-2SheepParentage assignmentSNPBreeding programs
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author F. Tortereau
C. R. Moreno
G. Tosser-Klopp
B. Servin
J. Raoul
spellingShingle F. Tortereau
C. R. Moreno
G. Tosser-Klopp
B. Servin
J. Raoul
Development of a SNP panel dedicated to parentage assignment in French sheep populations
BMC Genetics
Sheep
Parentage assignment
SNP
Breeding programs
author_facet F. Tortereau
C. R. Moreno
G. Tosser-Klopp
B. Servin
J. Raoul
author_sort F. Tortereau
title Development of a SNP panel dedicated to parentage assignment in French sheep populations
title_short Development of a SNP panel dedicated to parentage assignment in French sheep populations
title_full Development of a SNP panel dedicated to parentage assignment in French sheep populations
title_fullStr Development of a SNP panel dedicated to parentage assignment in French sheep populations
title_full_unstemmed Development of a SNP panel dedicated to parentage assignment in French sheep populations
title_sort development of a snp panel dedicated to parentage assignment in french sheep populations
publisher BMC
series BMC Genetics
issn 1471-2156
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Abstract Background The efficiency of breeding programs partly relies on the accuracy of the estimated breeding values which decreases when pedigrees are incomplete. Two reproduction techniques are mainly used by sheep breeders to identify the sires of lambs: animal insemination and natural matings with a single ram per group of ewes. Both methods have major drawbacks, notably time-consuming tasks for breeders, and are thus used at varying levels in breeding programs. As a consequence, the percentage of known sires can be very low in some breeds and results in less accurate estimated breeding values. Results In order to address this issue and offer an alternative strategy for obtaining parentage information, we designed a set of 249 SNPs for parentage assignment in French sheep breeds and tested its efficiency in one breed. The set was derived from the 54 K SNP chip that was used to genotype the thirty main French sheep populations. Only SNPs in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, displaying the highest Minor Allele Frequency across all the thirty populations and not associated with Mendelian errors in verified family trios were selected. The panel of 249 SNPs was successfully used in an on-farm test in the BMC breed and resulted in more than 95% of lambs being assigned to a unique sire. Conclusion In this study we developed a SNP panel for assignment that achieved good results in the on-farm testing. We also raised some conditions for optimal use of this panel: at least 180 SNPs should be used and a minute preparation of the list of candidate sires. Our panel also displays high levels of MAF in the SheepHapMap breeds, particularly in the South West European breeds.
topic Sheep
Parentage assignment
SNP
Breeding programs
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12863-017-0518-2
work_keys_str_mv AT ftortereau developmentofasnppaneldedicatedtoparentageassignmentinfrenchsheeppopulations
AT crmoreno developmentofasnppaneldedicatedtoparentageassignmentinfrenchsheeppopulations
AT gtosserklopp developmentofasnppaneldedicatedtoparentageassignmentinfrenchsheeppopulations
AT bservin developmentofasnppaneldedicatedtoparentageassignmentinfrenchsheeppopulations
AT jraoul developmentofasnppaneldedicatedtoparentageassignmentinfrenchsheeppopulations
_version_ 1724651992746295296