Abstract

Several studies have evaluated computational methods that infer the haplotypes from population genotype data in European cattle populations. However, little is known about how well they perform in African indigenous and crossbred populations. This study investigates: (1) global and local ancestry inference; (2) heterozygosity proportion estimation; and (3) genotype imputation in West African indigenous and crossbred cattle populations. Principal component analysis (PCA), ADMIXTURE, and LAMP-LD were used to analyse a medium-density single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) dataset from Senegalese crossbred cattle. Reference SNP data of East and West African indigenous and crossbred cattle populations were used to investigate the accuracy of imputation from low to medium-density and from medium to high-density SNP datasets using Minimac v3. The first two principal components differentiated Bos indicus from European Bos taurus and African Bos taurus from other breeds. Irrespective of assuming two or three ancestral breeds for the Senegalese crossbreds, breed proportion estimates from ADMIXTURE and LAMP-LD showed a high correlation (r ≥ 0.981). The observed ancestral origin heterozygosity proportion in putative F1 crosses was close to the expected value of 1.0, and clearly differentiated F1 from all other crosses. The imputation accuracies (estimated as correlation) between imputed and the real data in crossbred animals ranged from 0.142 to 0.717 when imputing from low to medium-density, and from 0.478 to 0.899 for imputation from medium to high-density. The imputation accuracy was generally higher when the reference data came from the same geographical region as the target population, and when crossbred reference data was used to impute crossbred genotypes. The lowest imputation accuracies were observed for indigenous breed genotypes. This study shows that ancestral origin heterozygosity can be estimated with high accuracy and will be far superior to the use of observed individual heterozygosity for estimating heterosis in African crossbred populations. It was not possible to achieve high imputation accuracy in West African crossbred or indigenous populations based on reference data sets from East Africa, and population-specific genotyping with high-density SNP assays is required to improve imputation.

Highlights

  • Indigenous cattle in Africa are an important genetic resource for diverse human communities, providing products and by-products, such as food, wealth, and economic security (Okomo-Adhiambo, 2002)

  • These data were obtained from several public-domain databases, plus projects run by the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) and collaborators (Marshall et al, 2017, 2020; Ema et al, 2018), and the Genomics Reference Resource for African Cattle (GRRFAC) supported by the Centre for Tropical Livestock Genetics and Health (CTLGH), and the Dairy Genetics East Africa project (DGEA; Strucken et al, 2017)

  • This study shows that ancestral heterozygosity can be estimated with high accuracy in African crossbred populations and will be far superior to the use of observed individual heterozygosity for estimating heterosis in such crossbred populations

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Indigenous cattle in Africa are an important genetic resource for diverse human communities, providing products and by-products, such as food, wealth, and economic security (Okomo-Adhiambo, 2002). Crossbreeding of locally adapted cattle with high-yielding European dairy breeds is an alternative strategy to improve productivity and improve the livelihoods of African smallholder farmers in a relatively short period (Wuletaw, 2004; Tegegne et al, 2010). In a homogeneous crossbred population that results entirely from inter-se crossing, the level of ancestral origin heterozygosity is a function of the breed composition. The level of ancestral origin heterozygosity depends on the breed composition of the parents of an individual (McAllister, 2002). An estimate of breed composition and ancestral origin heterozygosity can be obtained from complete pedigree information, but pedigree information is unavailable in most smallholder crossbred dairy populations (Rege, 2001). An alternative is to genotype animals for large numbers of SNPs and use this information to estimate breed composition and heterozygosity

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call