Animals (Mar 2022)

Development and Application of a High-Resolution Melting Analysis with Unlabeled Probes for the Screening of Short-Tailed Sheep <i>TBXT</i> Heterozygotes

  • Guang Yang,
  • Caiyun Wang,
  • Hong Su,
  • Daqing Wang,
  • Aolie Dou,
  • Lu Chen,
  • Teng Ma,
  • Moning Liu,
  • Jie Su,
  • Xiaojing Xu,
  • Yanyan Yang,
  • Tingyi He,
  • Xihe Li,
  • Yongli Song,
  • Guifang Cao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12060792
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
p. 792

Abstract

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The short-tailed phenotype has long been considered one of the best traits for population genetic improvement in sheep breeding. In short-tailed sheep, not only is tail fat eliminated but also the pubic area is exposed due to the lack of a tail covering, giving them an advantage in reproduction. Recent studies have shown that two linked mutations in sheep TBXT at nucleotides 333 and 334 are associated with the short-tailed phenotype. In the population of short-tailed sheep, several heterozygous mutants of this gene are found. In our research, we used high-resolution melting (HRM) to identify homozygous and heterozygous genotypes in a flock of short-tailed sheep and compared the results with those of Sanger sequencing, which were identical. This demonstrates that our established HRM method, a rapid and inexpensive genotyping method, can be used to identify homozygous and heterozygous individuals in short-tailed sheep flocks.

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