Animal (Nov 2024)

Cross-ancestry meta-genome-wide association studies provide insights to the understanding of semen traits in pigs

  • H. Cheng,
  • Z.Y. Zhang,
  • H. Han,
  • R. Wei,
  • W. Zhao,
  • Y.C. Sun,
  • B.B. Xu,
  • X.L. Hou,
  • J.L. Wang,
  • Y.Q. He,
  • Y. Fu,
  • Q.S. Wang,
  • Y.C. Pan,
  • Z. Zhang,
  • Z. Wang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 11
p. 101331

Abstract

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Semen traits play a crucial role in pig reproduction and fertility. However, limited data availability hinder a comprehensive understanding of the genetic mechanisms underlying these traits. In this study, we integrated 597 299 ejaculates and 3 596 sequence data to identify genetic variants and candidate genes related to four semen traits, including sperm progressive motility (MOT), semen volume, sperm concentration (CON), and effective sperm count (SUM). A cross-ancestry meta−genome-wide association study was conducted to detect 163 lead single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with MOT, CON, and SUM. Subsequently, transcriptome-wide association studies and colocalisation analyses were integrated to identify 176 candidate genes, many of which have documented roles in spermatogenesis or male mammal semen traits. Our analysis highlighted the potential involvement of CSM5, PDZD9, and LDAF1 in regulating semen traits through multiple methods. Finally, to validate the function of significant SNPs, we performed genomic feature best linear unbiased prediction in 348 independent pigs using identified trait-related SNP subsets as genomic features. We found that integrating the top 0.1, 1, and 5% significant SNPs as genomic features could enhance genomic prediction accuracy for CON and MOT compared to traditional genomic best linear unbiased prediction. This study contributes to a comprehensive understanding of the genetic mechanisms of boar semen traits and provides insight for developing genomic selection models.

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