Abstract

Copy Number Variation Regions (CNVR) were subjected to pedigree analysis to contribute to the understanding of their segregation patterns. Up to 492 Gochu Asturcelta pig individuals forming 478 different parents-offspring trios (61 different families) were genotyped using the Axiom_PigHDv1 Array (658,692 SNPs). CNVR calling, performed using two different platforms (PennCNV and QuantiSNP), allowed to identify a total of 344 candidate CNVR on the 18 porcine autosomes covering about 106.8 Mb of the pig genome. Sixty-nine CNVR were identified, to some extent, in both the parents and the offspring and were classified as segregating CNVR. The other candidate CNVR were called in one or more progeny but in neither parent and classified either as singleton or recurrent de novo CNVR. Segregating CNVR were, on average, larger and more frequent than the recurrent de novo CNVR (444.8 kb vs 287.9 kb long and 34 vs 5 individuals, respectively). In any case, segregating CNVR did not conform to strict Mendelian inheritance patterns: estimates of average paternal and maternal transmission rates ranged from 11.0 % to 13.4 % and mean inheritance rate was below 21 %. This issue should be carefully considered when interpreting the results of CNV studies. Segregating CNVR, present across generations, are unlikely to be artifacts or false positives and can be hypothesized to be important at the population level.

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