Abstract

BackgroundSeveral examples of structural variation (SV) affecting phenotypic traits have been reported in cattle. Currently the identification of SV from whole-genome sequence data (WGS) suffers from a high false positive rate. Our aim was to construct a high quality set of SV calls in cattle using WGS data. First, we tested two SV detection programs, Breakdancer and Pindel, and the overlap of these methods, on simulated sequence data to determine their precision and sensitivity. We then identified population SV from WGS of 252 Holstein and 64 Jersey bulls based on the overlapping calls from the two programs. In addition, we validated an overlapped SV set in 28 twice-sequenced Holstein individuals, and in another two validated sets (one for each breed) that were transmitted from sire to son. We also tested whether highly conserved gene sets across eukaryotes and recently expanded gene families in bovine were depleted and enriched, respectively, for SV.ResultsIn empirical WGS data, 17,518 SV covering 27.36 Mb were found in the Holstein population and 4285 SV covering 8.74 Mb in the Jersey population, of which 4.62 Mb of SV overlapped between Holsteins and Jerseys. A total of 11,534 candidate SV covering 5.64 Mb were validated in the 28 twice-sequenced individuals, while 3.49 and 0.67 Mb of SV were validated from Holstein and Jersey sire-son transmission, respectively. Only eight of 237 core eukaryotic genes had at least a 50-bp overlap with an SV from our validated sets, suggesting that conserved genes are depleted for SV (p < 0.05). In addition, we observed that recently expanded gene families were significantly more associated with SV than other genes. Long interspersed nuclear elements-1 were enriched for deletions when compared to the rest of the genome (p = 0.0035).ConclusionsWe reported SV from 252 Holstein and 64 Jersey individuals. A considerable proportion of Jersey population SV (53.5%) were also found in Holstein. In contrast, about 76.90% sire-son transmission validated SV were present in Jerseys and Holsteins. The enrichment of SV in expanding gene families suggests that SV can be a source of genetic variation for evolution.

Highlights

  • Several examples of structural variation (SV) affecting phenotypic traits have been reported in cattle

  • For heterozygous SV, the sensitivity of Breakdancer remained at a similar level for each type, while the sensitivity of Pindel was reduced by 35% for deletions, 8.5% for inversions and 5.15% for duplications, respectively

  • We found that about 36% of the CNV regions (CNVR) reported by Hou et al overlapped with our genome sequence set

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Summary

Introduction

Several examples of structural variation (SV) affecting phenotypic traits have been reported in cattle. Our aim was to construct a high quality set of SV calls in cattle using WGS data. We tested two SV detection programs, Breakdancer and Pindel, and the overlap of these methods, on simulated sequence data to determine their precision and sensitivity. We identified population SV from WGS of 252 Holstein and 64 Jersey bulls based on the overlapping calls from the two programs. In Angus cattle, 297 CNV were found to be associated with parasite resistance or susceptibility and to overlap with 437 genes enriched for immune function [12]. An 80-kb duplication on BTA1 (BTA for Bos taurus chromosome) was shown to be associated with the polled phenotype in Friesian origin cattle, and a 202-bp complex insertion-deletion on BTA21 with polled in Celtic origin cattle [14, 15]

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