Identification of a nonsense mutation in CWC15 associated with decreased reproductive efficiency in Jersey cattle.

With the recent advent of genomic tools for cattle, several recessive conditions affecting fertility have been identified and selected against, such as deficiency of uridine monophosphate synthase, complex vertebral malformation, and brachyspina. The current report refines the location of a recessiv...

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Main Authors: Tad S Sonstegard, John B Cole, Paul M VanRaden, Curtis P Van Tassell, Daniel J Null, Steven G Schroeder, Derek Bickhart, Matthew C McClure
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3551820?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-346bb47b4c8c4492b0e74cb09b7a53482020-11-25T01:14:07ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0181e5487210.1371/journal.pone.0054872Identification of a nonsense mutation in CWC15 associated with decreased reproductive efficiency in Jersey cattle.Tad S SonstegardJohn B ColePaul M VanRadenCurtis P Van TassellDaniel J NullSteven G SchroederDerek BickhartMatthew C McClureWith the recent advent of genomic tools for cattle, several recessive conditions affecting fertility have been identified and selected against, such as deficiency of uridine monophosphate synthase, complex vertebral malformation, and brachyspina. The current report refines the location of a recessive haplotype affecting fertility in Jersey cattle using crossover haplotypes, discovers the causative mutation using whole genome sequencing, and examines the gene's role in embryo loss. In an attempt to identify unknown recessive lethal alleles in the current dairy population, a search using deep Mendelian sampling of 5,288 Jersey cattle was conducted for high-frequency haplotypes that have a deficit of homozygotes at the population level. This search led to the discovery of a putative recessive lethal in Jersey cattle on Bos taurus autosome 15. The haplotype, denoted JH1, was associated with reduced fertility, and further investigation identified one highly-influential Jersey bull as the putative source ancestor. By combining SNP analysis of whole-genome sequences aligned to the JH1 interval and subsequent SNP validation a nonsense mutation in CWC15 was identified as the likely causative mutation underlying the fertility phenotype. No homozygous recessive individuals were found in 749 genotyped animals, whereas all known carriers and carrier haplotypes possessed one copy of the mutant allele. This newly identified lethal has been responsible for a substantial number of spontaneous abortions in Jersey dairy cattle throughout the past half-century. With the mutation identified, selection against the deleterious allele in breeding schemes will aid in reducing the incidence of this defect in the population. These results also show that carrier status can be imputed with high accuracy. Whole-genome resequencing proved to be a powerful strategy to rapidly identify a previously mapped deleterious mutation in a known carrier of a recessive lethal allele.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3551820?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tad S Sonstegard
John B Cole
Paul M VanRaden
Curtis P Van Tassell
Daniel J Null
Steven G Schroeder
Derek Bickhart
Matthew C McClure
spellingShingle Tad S Sonstegard
John B Cole
Paul M VanRaden
Curtis P Van Tassell
Daniel J Null
Steven G Schroeder
Derek Bickhart
Matthew C McClure
Identification of a nonsense mutation in CWC15 associated with decreased reproductive efficiency in Jersey cattle.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Tad S Sonstegard
John B Cole
Paul M VanRaden
Curtis P Van Tassell
Daniel J Null
Steven G Schroeder
Derek Bickhart
Matthew C McClure
author_sort Tad S Sonstegard
title Identification of a nonsense mutation in CWC15 associated with decreased reproductive efficiency in Jersey cattle.
title_short Identification of a nonsense mutation in CWC15 associated with decreased reproductive efficiency in Jersey cattle.
title_full Identification of a nonsense mutation in CWC15 associated with decreased reproductive efficiency in Jersey cattle.
title_fullStr Identification of a nonsense mutation in CWC15 associated with decreased reproductive efficiency in Jersey cattle.
title_full_unstemmed Identification of a nonsense mutation in CWC15 associated with decreased reproductive efficiency in Jersey cattle.
title_sort identification of a nonsense mutation in cwc15 associated with decreased reproductive efficiency in jersey cattle.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description With the recent advent of genomic tools for cattle, several recessive conditions affecting fertility have been identified and selected against, such as deficiency of uridine monophosphate synthase, complex vertebral malformation, and brachyspina. The current report refines the location of a recessive haplotype affecting fertility in Jersey cattle using crossover haplotypes, discovers the causative mutation using whole genome sequencing, and examines the gene's role in embryo loss. In an attempt to identify unknown recessive lethal alleles in the current dairy population, a search using deep Mendelian sampling of 5,288 Jersey cattle was conducted for high-frequency haplotypes that have a deficit of homozygotes at the population level. This search led to the discovery of a putative recessive lethal in Jersey cattle on Bos taurus autosome 15. The haplotype, denoted JH1, was associated with reduced fertility, and further investigation identified one highly-influential Jersey bull as the putative source ancestor. By combining SNP analysis of whole-genome sequences aligned to the JH1 interval and subsequent SNP validation a nonsense mutation in CWC15 was identified as the likely causative mutation underlying the fertility phenotype. No homozygous recessive individuals were found in 749 genotyped animals, whereas all known carriers and carrier haplotypes possessed one copy of the mutant allele. This newly identified lethal has been responsible for a substantial number of spontaneous abortions in Jersey dairy cattle throughout the past half-century. With the mutation identified, selection against the deleterious allele in breeding schemes will aid in reducing the incidence of this defect in the population. These results also show that carrier status can be imputed with high accuracy. Whole-genome resequencing proved to be a powerful strategy to rapidly identify a previously mapped deleterious mutation in a known carrier of a recessive lethal allele.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3551820?pdf=render
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