Abstract

BackgroundDeleterious genetic variation can increase in frequency as a result of mutations, genetic drift, and genetic hitchhiking. Although individual effects are often small, the cumulative effect of deleterious genetic variation can impact population fitness substantially. In this study, we examined the genome of commercial purebred chicken lines for deleterious and functional variations, combining genotype and whole-genome sequence data.ResultsWe analysed over 22,000 animals that were genotyped on a 60 K SNP chip from four purebred lines (two white egg and two brown egg layer lines) and two crossbred lines. We identified 79 haplotypes that showed a significant deficit in homozygous carriers. This deficit was assumed to stem from haplotypes that potentially harbour lethal recessive variations. To identify potentially deleterious mutations, a catalogue of over 10 million variants was derived from 250 whole-genome sequenced animals from three purebred white-egg layer lines. Out of 4219 putative deleterious variants, 152 mutations were identified that likely induce embryonic lethality in the homozygous state. Inferred deleterious variation showed evidence of purifying selection and deleterious alleles were generally overrepresented in regions of low recombination. Finally, we found evidence that mutations, which were inferred to be evolutionally intolerant, likely have positive effects in commercial chicken populations.ConclusionsWe present a comprehensive genomic perspective on deleterious and functional genetic variation in egg layer breeding lines, which are under intensive selection and characterized by a small effective population size. We show that deleterious variation is subject to purifying selection and that there is a positive relationship between recombination rate and purging efficiency. In addition, multiple putative functional coding variants were discovered in selective sweep regions, which are likely under positive selection. Together, this study provides a unique molecular perspective on functional and deleterious variation in commercial egg-laying chickens, which can enhance current genomic breeding practices to lower the frequency of undesirable variants in the population.

Highlights

  • Deleterious genetic variation can increase in frequency as a result of mutations, genetic drift, and genetic hitchhiking

  • Small effective population size and artificial selection can impact population fitness in domesticated populations substantially [1] and can lead to a high risk of inbreeding depression, which is the result of the accumulation of deleterious alleles that

  • We identified 9, 13, 7, and 50 haplotypes that exhibited a statistical deficit in homozygosity (DH) in the white layer dam line (WA), W1, crossbred lines (CB), and B1-B2 lines, respectively (Table 1) and

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Summary

Introduction

Deleterious genetic variation can increase in frequency as a result of mutations, genetic drift, and genetic hitchhiking. Individual effects are often small, the cumulative effect of deleterious genetic variation can impact population fitness substantially. We examined the genome of commercial purebred chicken lines for deleterious and functional variations, combining genotype and whole-genome sequence data. The number of deleterious genetic variants that are segregating in a population is affected by several factors, e.g. genetic drift, mutation rate, and selection. Small effective population size and artificial selection can impact population fitness in domesticated populations substantially [1] and can lead to a high risk of inbreeding depression, which is the result of the accumulation of deleterious alleles that. We examined chicken layer lines that have been primarily selected for production traits, including mortality, egg production, egg composition, shell quality [8], and traits related to animal welfare [9]. It is essential to better understand the relationship between genotype and phenotype, which is, to a large extent, still a black box [13]

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