Abstract

BackgroundGenerally, populations differ in terms of environmental and genetic factors, which can create differences in allele substitution effects between populations. Therefore, a single genotype may have different additive genetic values in different populations. The correlation between the two additive genetic values of a single genotype in two populations is known as the additive genetic correlation between populations and thus, can differ from 1. Our objective was to investigate whether differences in linkage disequilibrium (LD) and allele frequencies of markers and causal loci between populations affect the bias of the estimated genetic correlation. We simulated two populations that were separated by 50 generations and differed in LD pattern between markers and causal loci, as measured by the LD-statistic r. We used a high marker density to represent a high consistency of LD between populations, and lower marker densities to represent situations with a lower consistency of LD between populations. Markers and causal loci were selected to have either similar or different allele frequencies in the two populations.ResultsOur results show that genetic correlations were underestimated only slightly when the difference in allele frequencies between the two populations was similar for the markers and the causal loci. A lower marker density, representing a lower consistency of LD between populations, had only a minor effect on the underestimation of the genetic correlation. When the difference in allele frequencies between the two populations was not similar for markers and causal loci, genetic correlations were severely underestimated. This bias occurred because the markers did not predict accurately the relationships at causal loci.ConclusionsFor an unbiased estimation of the genetic correlation between populations, the markers should accurately predict the relationships at the causal loci. To achieve this, it is essential that the difference in allele frequencies between populations is similar for markers and causal loci. Our results show that differences in LD phase between causal loci and markers across populations have little effect on the estimated genetic correlation.

Highlights

  • Populations differ in terms of environmental and genetic factors, which can create differences in allele substitution effects between populations

  • Genomic relationships Estimates of the genetic variance are biased when the regression of true relationships on marker-based relationships is not equal to 1 [38]. We investigated whether this could explain the underestimation of the genetic correlation by considering the genomic relationships at the causal loci as the true relationships for that trait

  • Our results show that when the difference in allele frequencies between the two populations is similar for markers and causal loci, estimated genetic correlations are only slightly underestimated using markers

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Summary

Introduction

Populations differ in terms of environmental and genetic factors, which can create differences in allele substitution effects between populations. The correlation between the two additive genetic values of a single genotype in two populations is known as the additive genetic correlation between populations and can differ from 1. Because of genotype by environment interactions and non-additive genetic effects, these differences result in different allele substitution effects between populations [1,2,3]. A single genotype may have different additive genetic values in different populations [2, 4]. The additive genetic value is the product of the genotype, which is measured as the allele count at each locus, multiplied by the allele substitution effects for that population. The additive genetic correlation between two populations is the correlation between the two additive genetic values of a single genotype in the two populations and may differ considerably from 1

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