Abstract
Resilience is the capacity of an animal to be minimally affected by disturbances or rapidly return to the state pertained before exposure to a disturbance. Resilience indicators can be estimated from longitudinal production data, using deviations of observed from expected production levels. One component of resilience is disease resilience, which includes general disease resistance. Natural antibodies (NAbs) are an indicator trait for general disease resistance. The aim of this study was to perform a genome-wide association study (GWAS) for resilience indicators and NAbs in a Rhode Island purebred layer line and study potential overlap in genomic regions detected for these traits. For 2,494 hens, deviations (i.e., differences) between observed weekly egg production and expected weekly egg production were calculated. Resilience indicators were then defined as the natural logarithm of the variance of deviations, skewness of deviations, and lag-one autocorrelation of deviations. For a subset of 1,221 hens genotyped with the 60 K Illumina SNP BeadChip, NAbs binding keyhole-limpet hemocyanin were available (isotypes IgM and IgG). Heritabilities, estimated with a linear mixed animal model, were 0.39 for IgM and 0.20 for IgG, and ranged from 0.03 to 0.18 for the resilience indicators. No significant associations were found in the GWAS, except for a single chromosomal region for the skewness of egg deviations in wk 25 to 83 of the laying period. The absence of significant peaks for NAbs and resilience indicators suggests that there are no genes with major effect and that the traits are likely under polygenic control in this line.
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