INVESTIGADORES
GIOVAMBATTISTA Guillermo
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Differential proportion of ancestral MHC haplotypes in Brangus breed.
Autor/es:
GOSZCZYNSKI D E; CORBI BOTTO C M; MORALES H F; POSIK D M; VILLEGAS CASTAGNASO E E; MUNILLA S; PERAL GARCIA P; ROGBERG A; CANTET R J C; GIOVAMBATTISTA G
Lugar:
UTAH
Reunión:
Conferencia; 35th International Society for Animal Genetics Conference; 2016
Resumen:
Brangus breed was developed to use the superior characteristics of both founder breeds. The breed maintains the high adaptability to tropical and sub-tropical environments, disease resistance and rusticity from Zebu cattle, and the high reproductive capability, production and meat quality traits from Angus. It has been studied that the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), located on BTA23, encodes genes implicated in the adaptive immune response, and may be responsible for the adaptation to those environments. The objectives of this work were to study the MHC ancestral haplotypes in a Brangussample to detect the breed of origin (Angus or Brahman) of each genotype, and then determine if there is a divergence from the overall genomic proportion. For this, a total of 169animals (99 Brangus, 48 Angus and 22 Brahman) were genotyped using Affymetrix BOS1 (640K) Chip. Structure software v2.3.4 was used to estimate the whole genome fraction of each founding breed that remained in the sampled Brangus animals, with a subset of 5K SNPs evenly spaced over the 29 autosomes. The SNPs included in the MHC BTA23 region (5585SNPs within 7013,913?28,998,760 bp) were primarily phased with ShapeIT2 algorithm, for further haplotype origin assessment with LAMP-LD package.Two other regions demonstrated for coat color (MC1Rgene on BTA18: 1682,065?2,046,164bp) and polled trait (BTA1: 14,038,121?14,991,286bp) were selected for Proof of Concept, as those traits were selected inBrangus for the Angus phenotype (solid coat color and polled). The result obtained for the whole genome composition of Brangus was 34.7% Brahman, ranging from 22.3% to 81.1%, while for the MHC region, thehaplotypes appear to have originated from Brahman in 55.3% of the chromosomes. As expected, the Proof of Control regions showed that the Angus haplotypes were nearly fixed, which supports the hypothesis thatthe divergence of the haplotypes of the MHC region may have originated in a selection process to promote adaptation to tropical and sub-tropical environments.