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In-Service: Animal Breeding and Genetics. Dr. Alan Fahey March 24 th 2011 NCE-MSTL, University of Limerick. Contact Information. alan.fahey@ucd.ie 01-7166248 Room 238 Vet Sciences Centre, School of Agriculture, Food Science, and Veterinary Medicine, UCD, Belfield, Dublin 4. Topics Covered.
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In-Service: Animal Breeding and Genetics Dr. Alan Fahey March 24th 2011 NCE-MSTL, University of Limerick
Contact Information • alan.fahey@ucd.ie • 01-7166248 • Room 238 Vet Sciences Centre, School of Agriculture, Food Science, and Veterinary Medicine, UCD, Belfield, Dublin 4.
Topics Covered • Variation • Dominance • Inbreeding and Crossbreeding • Progeny and Performance Testing • Problem based learning sessions • How to use an AI Catalogue
Variation LCH 2006 7(a) iii • Differences among individuals within a population • Tells us about the uniformity of the population • Variation exists for performance, genetic, and environmental components
DiscreteVariation Continuous Variation Quantitative traits have continuous variation Quantitative traits are controlled by many genes Each gene has a small effect Qualitative traits have discrete variation Qualitative traits are controlled by a single gene Single gene has a large effect
Why is Variation Important? • Variation is the source of genetic change • If there is little genetic variation then it is difficult to find an individuals with better genetic potential
Why is Variation Important? • Variation is the source of genetic change • If there is little genetic variation then it is difficult to find an individuals with better genetic potential
Dominance: Glossary • Allele - Alternate forms of genes. Genes occur in pairs in body cells, one gene of a pair may have one effect and another gene of that same pair (allele) may have a different effect on the same trait. • Heterozygote – one dominant and one recessive allele • Homozygote – both alleles are either dominant or recessive • Genotype – combination of genes for a trait
Complete Dominance (2000 Q7d) Ss, ss (non-starchy) SS (starchy) Kk, kk (wrinkled) KK (smooth) Cross: KKSS x KkSs Alleles: K K S S x K k S s F1 Genotype: KKSS;KKSs;KkSS ;KkSs F1 Phenotype: All smooth and starchy The expression of the heterozygoteis identical to the expression of the homozygous dominant genotype
Partial Dominance Yellow Green yy Yy YY The expression of the heterozygote is intermediate to the expression of the homozygous dominant genotype and more closely resembles the homozygous dominant genotype
No Dominance Shorthorn Cattle White Roan Red RR Rr rr Cross: Rr x Rr (Roan x Roan) Alleles: R r x R r F1 Genotype: RR; Rr ;Rr ; rr F1 Phenotype: red; roan;roan; white The expression of the heterozygote is exactly midway to the expression of the homozygousgenotypes
Over Dominance Yellow Green yy YY Yy The expression of the heterozygote is outside the range defined by the homozygous genotypes and most closely resembles the expression of the homozygous dominant genotypes
Inbreeding v Crossbreeding2007 HL 7(a) i • Recessive – an allele whose phenotype is masked when the dominant allele is present • Inbreeding depression - loss in performance due to inbreeding • Locus – the location of a gene on a chromosome
Inbreeding • Related animals have more genes in common • Animals of outstanding genetic merit are likely to have relatives that have above average genetic merit
C C www.eurogeneaiservices.com
Inbreeding • Related animals also have more unfavourable genes in common • Some recessive genes cause genetic diseases, or adversely affect reproduction, survival or fitness of animals • Only cause problems in animals that carry two copies of the gene - homozygous recessive animals
Inbreeding • Matings between related animals are more likely to produce offspring that are homozygous for these genes than matings between unrelated animals • Whenever selection is practiced in a closed population (eg breed, closed herd) over a long period of time, there is an gradual increase in inbreeding • This increase is cumulative and inevitable
Inbreeding • Inbreeding depression • Reverse of hybrid vigour • A decrease in performance of inbreds (fertility, survivability) • Line-breeding • Dramatic form of inbreeding • Mating of individuals within a particular line • Designed to maintain a substantial degree of relationship to a highly regarded ancestor without causing high levels of inbreeding • Many breeds were formed by line-breeding e.g. father-daughter or mother-son matings
Inbreeding • Why inbreed? • Increase in uniformity • Create opportunity for hybrid vigour (in crosses of inbreds • To identify deleterious recessive alleles in population • Necessary for breeders of registered purebreds as matings to non-purebred ineligible for registration
Inbreeding % in Irish Cattle Charolais (-∆-), Limousin (--), Hereford (-•-), Angus (--), Simmental (-▲-), and Holstein-Friesian (-₀-) breeds across year of birth. Mc Parland et al., 2007
Inbreeding Depression Mc Parland et al., 2007
Crossbreeding • Mating of two non-related individuals from different breeds • Breed A are homozygous recessive at the B locus (bb) • Breed B are homozygous recessive at the B locus (BB) • Crossing breed A and B lead to heterozygosity at locus B (Bb) • Creates hybrid vigour (heterosis)
Hybrid Vigour • Greatest in traits associated with reproduction, survival and overall fitness • Opposite of inbreeding depression • Crossbreeding creates animals which are heterozygous at more loci • Lower proportion of offspring are homozygous for recessive genes that adversely affect reproduction etc. • Greater between genetically diverse breeds
Performance v Progeny Testing2007 HL 7(a) ii • Performance testing is carried on the individual animal e.g feed intake, growth • This is carried out at a central location (one environment) • This information is used to determine the genetic merit of the animal and its ancestors
Progeny Test • A team of sires are mated to females in several herds • Detailed phenotype information is recorded on all progeny • This provides information on sires progeny across several environments • This is used to calculate the genetic merit of the sire, dam, and progeny
Sire Progeny Farm 1 Progeny Farm n Progeny Farm 2 Progeny Farm 3 Phenotypes and Pedigree Stored in Database e.g ICBF and Sheep Ireland
Teaching resources General Information • www.icbf.com • http://www.icbf.com/publications/glossaryatol.php (glossary) • http://www.icbf.com/publications/2008cattlestat.php (cattle statistics) • http://www.icbf.com/publications/index.php (publications) • www.sheep.ie • http://www.sheep.ie/publications/glossary.php (glossary) • http://www.sheep.ie/publications/referencedocs.php (publications) Sheep Breed Societies • www.belclaresheep.com • www.charollaissheep.com • www.pedigreesheep.com • www.irishtexel.com • www.vendeensheep.ie • www.mayosheepproducers.com • www.suffolksheep.org
Teaching resources • Rare Irish Breeds • www.kerrycattle.ie • www.irishspecklepark.com • www.dextercattle.co.uk • Dairy Cattle • www.irishshorthorns.com • www.ihfa.com • www.ukjerseys.com • www.brownswissusa.com • Beef Cattle • www.aberdeen-angus.co.uk • www.irishangus.ie • www.ibbcs.com • www.aubrac.ie • www.irishblondedaquitaine.ie • www.charolais.ie • www.irishhereford.com • www.irishlimousin.com • www.irishpiemontesesociety.ie • http://www.irishsimmental.com/ • Rare Irish Breeds • www.kerrycattle.ie • www.irishspecklepark.com • www.dextercattle.co.uk
Breeding Game • http://pbskids.org/dragonflytv/games/dog_breeding_v37.swf