INVESTIGADORES
PERAL GARCIA Pilar
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
GENOMIC DATA REVEALS A SERIOUS UNDERESTIMATION OF PEDIGREE INBREEDING LEVELS IN POLO ARGENTINO HORSES
Autor/es:
AZCONA, FLORENCIA; MOLINA, A.; PERAL GARCÍA, P.; DEMYDA-PEYRÁS, S.
Lugar:
Virtual
Reunión:
Conferencia; 38th International Society for Animal Genetics Virtual Conference (2021); 2021
Institución organizadora:
International Society for Animal Genetics
Resumen:
The Argentine Polo Horse (APH) is a novel breed created 40 years ago in Argentina by breeding selected native horses based on sports performance with Thoroughbreds to increase speed and reactiveness. Despite closing mating, our previous reports, based on pedigree data, do not show significant increases in inbreeding. Hereby, we aim to validate these findings using genomic data. To this end, we genotyped 49 APH using the Illumina Equine GGP array (71,805 SNPs) and determined the molecular inbreeding values (FROH) using ROH. The analysis included total FROH (using all the information available) and FROH theoretically produced during the last 3, 6, and 9 generations (minimum ROH length of 16.67Mb, 8.33Mb, and 5.55Mb respectively); and the ancient inbreeding (originated before the last 9 generations). Finally, results were compared with pedigree-based inbreeding values obtained using 112,000 birth records (FPED). Average pedigree inbreeding was low (FPED = 0.1%, with 23 of 49 individuals showing a FPED = 0), even the acceptable pedigree completeness observed (4.4 EGC; 11.1 GMAX). On the contrary, FROH values were notably higher, averaging 14.71%. Correlations between PED and SNP inbreeding values were moderate, but the analysis per generation showed that only 26.68% was explained by mating produced during the last 9 generations, and only 5.55% during the last 3 (Table 1). On the contrary, 63% of inbreeding detected is explained by ancient inbreeding (FROHANC), which was not correlated with FPED. Although the analysis of the robust APHpedigree revealed low inbreeding values, genomic data indicate a completely different situation. All the animals demonstrated increased levels of inbreeding (FROH ranged from 11.43% to 19.67%) mostly due to an ancient basis. These results can be explained by the strong influence of Thoroughbred, which is a very old and selected breed with a high inbreeding load, was probably inherited by the APC, without being noticed. Overall, we demonstrated that that genetic characterization using pedigree records is a valuable resource to guide breeding decisions, but it can underestimate inbreeding values. Therefore, we believe that genomic analysis are necessary to obtain a more realistic idea of the genetic variability in breeds with relatively new studbooks, but even more if they were influenced by inbred breeds such as TB.