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An evaluation of inbreeding measures using a whole-genome sequenced cattle pedigree

Veterinary Science

An evaluation of inbreeding measures using a whole-genome sequenced cattle pedigree

S. W. Alemu, N. K. Kadri, et al.

This groundbreaking study investigates various estimators of the inbreeding coefficient (F) in Holstein cattle, revealing insights into homozygosity and inbreeding depression. Conducted by a team of researchers including Setegn Worku Alemu and Naveen Kumar Kadri, the findings emphasize the superiority of genomic measures over traditional pedigree-based estimates.... show more
Abstract
The estimation of the inbreeding coefficient (F) is essential for the study of inbreeding depression (ID) or for the management of populations under conservation. Several methods have been proposed to estimate the realized F using genetic markers, but it remains unclear which one should be used. Here we used whole-genome sequence data for 245 individuals from a Holstein cattle pedigree to empirically evaluate which estimators best capture homozygosity at variants causing ID, such as rare deleterious alleles or loci presenting heterozygote advantage and segregating at intermediate frequency. Estimators relying on the correlation between uniting gametes (FUNI) or on the genomic relationships (FGRM) presented the highest correlations with these variants. However, homozygosity at rare alleles remained poorly captured. A second group of estimators relying on excess homozygosity (FHOM), homozygous-by-descent segments (FHRD), runs-of-homozygosity (FROH) or on the known genealogy (FPED) was better at capturing whole-genome homozygosity, reflecting the consequences of inbreeding on all variants, and for young alleles with low to moderate frequencies (0.10 < f < 0.25). The results indicate that FUNI and FGRM might present a stronger association with ID. However, the situation might be different when recessive deleterious alleles reach higher frequencies, such as in populations with a small effective population size. For locus-specific inbreeding measures or at low marker density, the ranking of the methods can also change as FHBD makes better use of the information from neighboring markers. Finally, we confirmed that genomic measures are in general superior to pedigree-based estimates. In particular, FPED was uncorrelated with locus-specific homozygosity.
Publisher
Heredity
Published On
Nov 06, 2020
Authors
Setegn Worku Alemu, Naveen Kumar Kadri, Chad Harland, Pierre Faux, Carole Charlier, Armando Caballero, Tom Druet
Tags
inbreeding coefficient
holstein cattle
homozygosity
genomic measures
inbreeding depression
deletion alleles
pedigree-based estimates
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