Abstract

This paper reports an exploratory study based on quantitative genomic analysis in dairy traits of American Alpine goats. The dairy traits are quality-determining components in goat milk, cheese, ice cream, etc. Alpine goat phenotypes for quality components have been routinely recorded for many years and deposited in the Council on Dairy Cattle Breeding (CDCB) repository. The data collected were used to conduct an exploratory genome-wide association study (GWAS) from 72 female Alpine goats originating from locations throughout the U.S. Genotypes were identified with the Illumina Goat 50K single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) BeadChip. The analysis used a polygenic model where the dropping criterion was a call rate ≥ 0.95. The initial dataset was composed of ~60,000 rows of SNPs and 21 columns of phenotypic traits and composed of 53,384 scaffolds containing other informative data points used for genomic predictive power. Phenotypic association with the 50K BeadChip revealed 26,074 reads of candidate genes. These candidate genes segregated as separate novel SNPs and were identified as statistically significant regions for genome and chromosome level trait associations. Candidate genes associated differently for each of the following phenotypic traits: test day milk yield (13,469 candidate genes), test day protein yield (25,690 candidate genes), test day fat yield (25,690 candidate genes), percentage protein (25,690 candidate genes), percentage fat (25,690 candidate genes), and percentage lactose content (25,690 candidate genes). The outcome of this study supports elucidation of novel genes that are important for livestock species in association to key phenotypic traits. Validation towards the development of marker-based selection that provides precision breeding methods will thereby increase the breeding value.

Highlights

  • The use of goats to convert poorly digestible fiber into highquality meat and milk has been a mainstay since 9,000 YBP [1]

  • This study explored the use of genome-wide associations to identify heritable milking traits in the American Alpine goat

  • This study identified information that can be used for the benefit of genomics in goats and Candidate genes Test day milk Test day protein Test day fat Protein Fat Lactose

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Summary

Introduction

The use of goats to convert poorly digestible fiber into highquality meat and milk has been a mainstay since 9,000 YBP [1]. Goats provide milk to humans more than any other dairy animal [2]. Complex genetic and metabolic networks are responsible for regulating lactation physiology [5,6,7] that differ between goat milk and cow milk according to the Nutritional Composition of Goat Milk Products in the U.S [8] based on its fat, lactose, and fatty acid composition. This suggests novel differences exist in the regulatory networks in caprines [7]

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