Journal of Dairy Science (Sep 2024)

Genome-wide association analyses reveal copy number variant regions associated with reproduction and disease traits in Canadian Holstein cattle

  • Hinayah Rojas de Oliveira,
  • Tatiane C.S. Chud,
  • Gerson A. Oliveira, Jr.,
  • Isis C. Hermisdorff,
  • Saranya G. Narayana,
  • Christina M. Rochus,
  • Adrien M. Butty,
  • Francesca Malchiodi,
  • Paul Stothard,
  • Filippo Miglior,
  • Christine F. Baes,
  • Flavio S. Schenkel

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 107, no. 9
pp. 7052 – 7063

Abstract

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ABSTRACT: This study aimed to evaluate the impact of copy number variants (CNV) on 13 reproduction and 12 disease traits in Holstein cattle. Intensity signal files containing log R ratio and B allele frequency information from 13,730 Holstein animals genotyped with a 95K SNP panel, and 8,467 Holstein animals genotyped with a 50K SNP panel were used to identify the CNVs. Subsequently, the identified CNVs were validated using whole-genome sequence data from 126 animals, resulting in 870 high-confidence copy number variant regions (CNVR) on 12,131 animals. Out of these, 54 CNVR had frequencies higher than or equal to 1% in the population and were used in the genome-wide association analysis (one CNVR at a time, including the G matrix). Results revealed that 4 CNVR were significantly associated with at least one of the traits analyzed in this study. Specifically, 2 CNVR were associated with 3 reproduction traits (i.e., calf survival, first service to conception, and nonreturn rate), and 2 CNVR were associated with 2 disease traits (i.e., metritis and retained placenta). These CNVR harbored genes implicated in immune response, cellular signaling, and neuronal development, supporting their potential involvement in these traits. Further investigations to unravel the mechanistic and functional implications of these CNVR on the mentioned traits are warranted.

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