The pattern of linkage disequilibrium in German Holstein cattle

2010 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​The pattern of linkage disequilibrium in German Holstein cattle​
Qanbari, S.; Pimentel, E. C. G.; Tetens, J. ; Thaller, G.; Lichtner, P.; Sharifi, A. R. & Simianer, H.​ (2010) 
Animal Genetics41(4) pp. 346​-356​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2052.2009.02011.x 

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Authors
Qanbari, Saber; Pimentel, E. C. G.; Tetens, Jens ; Thaller, Georg; Lichtner, Peter; Sharifi, Ahmad Reza; Simianer, Henner
Abstract
P>This study presents a second generation of linkage disequilibrium (LD) map statistics for the whole genome of the Holstein-Friesian population, which has a four times higher resolution compared with that of the maps available so far. We used DNA samples of 810 German Holstein-Friesian cattle genotyped by the Illumina Bovine SNP50K BeadChip to analyse LD structure. A panel of 40 854 (75.6%) markers was included in the final analysis. The pairwise r2 statistic of SNPs up to 5 Mb apart across the genome was estimated. A mean value of r2 = 0.30 +/- 0.32 was observed in pairwise distances of < 25 kb and it dropped to 0.20 +/- 0.24 at 50-75 kb, which is nearly the average inter-marker space in this study. The proportion of SNPs in useful LD (r2 >= 0.25) was 26% for the distance of 50 and 75 kb between SNPs. We found a lower level of LD for SNP pairs at the distance < 100 kb than previously thought. Analysis revealed 712 haplo-blocks spanning 4.7% of the genome and containing 8.0% of all SNPs. Mean and median block length were estimated as 164 +/- 117 kb and 144 kb respectively. Allele frequencies of the SNPs have a considerable and systematic impact on the estimate of r2. It is shown that minimizing the allele frequency difference between SNPs reduces the influence of frequency on r2 estimates. Analysis of past effective population size based on the direct estimates of recombination rates from SNP data showed a decline in effective population size to N(e) = 103 up to similar to 4 generations ago. Systematic effects of marker density and effective population size on observed LD and haplotype structure are discussed.
Issue Date
2010
Status
published
Publisher
Wiley-blackwell
Journal
Animal Genetics 
ISSN
0268-9146

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