Abstract

BackgroundOver many years, artificial selection has substantially improved milk production by cows. However, the genes that underlie milk production quantitative trait loci (QTL) remain relatively poorly characterised. Here, we investigate a previously reported QTL located at the CSF2RB locus on chromosome 5, for several milk production phenotypes, to better understand its underlying genetic and molecular causes.ResultsUsing a population of 29,350 taurine dairy cows, we conducted association analyses for milk yield and composition traits, and identified highly significant QTL for milk yield, milk fat concentration, and milk protein concentration. Strikingly, protein concentration and milk yield appear to show co-located yet genetically distinct QTL. To attempt to understand the molecular mechanisms that might be mediating these effects, gene expression data were used to investigate eQTL for 11 genes in the broader interval. This analysis highlighted genetic impacts on CSF2RB and NCF4 expression that share similar association signatures to those observed for lactation QTL, strongly implicating one or both of these genes as responsible for these effects. Using the same gene expression dataset representing 357 lactating cows, we also identified 38 novel RNA editing sites in the 3′ UTR of CSF2RB transcripts. The extent to which two of these sites were edited also appears to be genetically co-regulated with lactation QTL, highlighting a further layer of regulatory complexity that involves the CSF2RB gene.ConclusionsThis locus presents a diversity of molecular and lactation QTL, likely representing multiple overlapping effects that, at a minimum, highlight the CSF2RB gene as having a causal role in these processes.

Highlights

  • Over many years, artificial selection has substantially improved milk production by cows

  • Sequence data were imputed using Beagle4 [16] (74.8–76.2 Mbp; 11,733 markers), and phenotypes were produced from herd-test records (N = 29,350 cows) from the animals’ first lactations to derive values for milk yield (MY), protein yield (PY), fat yield (FY), protein concentration (PC), and fat concentration (FC; see Methods)

  • The most significant quantitative trait loci (QTL) was identified for PC, followed by FC and MY, and the least significant QTL was detected for FY

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Summary

Introduction

Artificial selection has substantially improved milk production by cows. We investigate a previously reported QTL located at the CSF2RB locus on chromosome 5, for several milk production phenotypes, to better understand its underlying genetic and molecular causes. In much of the Western world, milk is primarily produced for human consumption by taurine cattle (Bos taurus) dairy breeds Within these breeds, many generations of selection have improved milk production capacity and efficiency. As part of work presented elsewhere [10], we performed a genome-wide This locus broadly overlaps QTL that were reported previously for milk yield [3, 13], milk protein yield [3, 13], milk protein concentration [1, 2, 14], and milk fat concentration [2, 9]. No gene has been definitively implicated, Pausch et al [2] noted significant markers that were located adjacent to the CSF2RB, NCF4, and TST genes, and proposed the latter as the most likely

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