Abstract

Vertnin (VRTN) variants have been associated with the number of thoracic vertebrae in European pigs, but the association has not been evidenced in Chinese indigenous pigs. In this study, we first performed a genome-wide association study in Chinese Erhualian pigs using one VRTN candidate causative mutation and the Illumina Porcine 60K SNP Beadchips. The VRTN mutation is significantly associated with thoracic vertebral number in this population. We further show that the VRTN mutation has pleiotropic and desirable effects on teat number and carcass (body) length across four diverse populations, including Erhualian, White Duroc × Erhualian F2 population, Duroc and Landrace pigs. No association was observed between VRTN genotype and growth and fatness traits in these populations. Therefore, testing for the VRTN mutation in pig breeding schemes would not only increase the number of vertebrae and nipples, but also enlarge body size without undesirable effects on growth and fatness traits, consequently improving pork production. Further, by using whole-genome sequence data, we show that the VRTN mutation was possibly introgressed from Chinese pigs into European pigs. Our results provide another example showing that introgressed Chinese genes greatly contributed to the development and production of modern European pig breeds.

Highlights

  • The number of vertebrae including cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacral and caudal vertebrae shows developmental constraint in most vertebrates[1]

  • We further showed that the favorable allele for increased thoracic vertebrae at the QTN is segregating in some of Chinese indigenous breeds and is possibly of Chinese origin[13]

  • We demonstrate that the VRTN candidate QTNs are significantly associated with the number of thoracic vertebrae in Chinese Erhualian pigs

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Summary

Introduction

The number of vertebrae including cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacral and caudal vertebrae shows developmental constraint in most vertebrates[1]. We demonstrate that the VRTN candidate QTNs are significantly associated with the number of thoracic vertebrae in Chinese Erhualian pigs.

Results
Conclusion
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