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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Are two beneficial mutations (p.Q249R and 90-bp Indel) within the ovinegene associated with growth traits?

Journal:
Frontiers in veterinary science
Year:
2023
Authors:
Xu, Hongwei et al.
Affiliation:
College of Life Science and Engineering · China

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The problem of achieving economic efficiency in sheep breeding can be largely solved by increasing sheep productivity. Recently, thegene has been revealed by GWAS as a potential candidate gene for sheep body morphometric traits. Therefore, the present study aimed to investigate whether genetic polymorphisms (p.Q249R SNP and 90-bp deletion) in thegene are associated with sheep growth traits. METHODS: PCR-based genotyping was performed on 1,875 sheep, including 1,191 Guiqian semi-fine wool (GQSFW), 560 Luxi Blackhead (LXBH), 55 Lanzhou fat-tailed (LZFT), and 69 Weining (WN) sheep. Genotype-phenotype association was assessed using the independent samples-test and ANOVA. The significance level was set at &#x3b1;< 0.05. The threshold-value for significance was adjusted after correction for multiple comparisons using the Bonferroni correction. RESULTS: After the Bonferroni correction, it was found that individuals with FecB/FecBgenotypes of the p.Q249R had significantly better growth traits in LXBH ewe lambs, including the body length, chest width, paunch girth, cannon circumference, and hip width (<0.0005). Meanwhile, associations were observed between 90-bp deletion polymorphism and several growth traits (body length, body height, chest depth, and canon circumference) in GQSFW ewe adults after the Bonferroni correction (< 0.0002), and individuals with the "DD" genotypes had greater growth traits. CONCLUSION: Our findings align with the experimental observations from GWAS, which identified thegene as a potential candidate gene for body measurement traits. These findings not only confirm the previous study's results but also expand on them. Therefore, further investigations regarding the impact ofpolymorphisms on growth traits are necessary in other sheep breeds.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38644960/