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Haplotype tests for diagnosis of QTL and genes

Thursday, August 21, 2014: 11:45 AM
Bayshore Grand Ballroom E-F (The Westin Bayshore)
John M Henshall , Food Futures Flagship, CSIRO Animal, Food and Health Sciences, Armidale, Australia
Emily K Piper , The University of Queensland, School of Veterinary Science, Gatton, Australia
Bruce Tier , Animal Genetics and Breeding Unit, Armidale, Australia
Abstract Text: Tests based on haplotypes are usually considered to be temporary measures until causal mutations are found.  An alternative view is that for livestock improvement they may be sufficient.  Haplotype tests can be delivered quickly and cheaply, requiring no knowledge of the causal mutation.  Appropriately applied, they are robust to uncertainty in the number of alleles at the mutation.  With a haplotype based test for polled in beef cattle we found that most animals carried common haplotypes, and for these there was very high concordance in their association with the underlying genotypes.  Phenotyped animals tested commercially can contribute to the accuracy of haplotype effect estimates, especially for rare or previously unseen haplotypes.  For livestock, haplotype based tests may be competitive with causal mutation tests in delivering genetic improvement.

Keywords:

Haplotype

Beef Cattle

Polled