Accuracy of direct genomic values for functional traits in Brown Swiss cattle

2014 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Accuracy of direct genomic values for functional traits in Brown Swiss cattle​
Kramer, M.; Erbe, M.; Seefried, F. R.; Gredler, B.; Bapst, B.; Bieber, A. & Simianer, H.​ (2014) 
Journal of Dairy Science97(3) pp. 1774​-1781​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2013-7054 

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Authors
Kramer, M.; Erbe, Malena; Seefried, Franz Reinhold; Gredler, Birgit; Bapst, Beat; Bieber, A.; Simianer, Henner
Abstract
In this study, direct genomic values for the functional traits general temperament, milking temperament, aggressiveness, rank order in herd, milking speed, udder depth, position of labia, and days to first heat in Brown Swiss dairy cattle were estimated based on similar to 777,000 (777K) single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) information from 1,126 animals Accuracy of direct genomic values was assessed by a 5-fold cross-validation with 10 replicates. Correlations between deregressed proofs and direct genomic values were 0.63 for general temperament, 0.73 for milking temperament, 0.69 for aggressiveness, 0.65 for rank order in herd, 0.69 for milking speed, 0.71 for udder depth, 0.66 for position of labia, and 0.74 for days to first heat. Using the information of similar to 54,000 (54K) SNP led to only marginal deviations in the observed accuracy. Trying to predict the 20% youngest bulls led to correlations of 0.55, 0.77, 0.73, 0.55, 0.64, 0.59, 0.67, and 0.77, respectively, for the traits listed above. Using a novel method to estimate the accuracy of a direct genomic value (defined as correlation between direct genomic value and true breeding value and accounting for the correlation between direct genomic values and conventional breeding values) revealed accuracies of 0.37, 0.20, 0.19, 0.27, 0.48, 0.45, 0.36, and 0.12, respectively, for the traits listed above. These values are much smaller but probably also more realistic than accuracies based on correlations, given the heritabilities and samples sizes in this study. Annotation of the largest estimated SNP effects revealed 2 candidate genes affecting the traits general temperament and days to first heat.
Issue Date
2014
Status
published
Publisher
Elsevier Science Inc
Journal
Journal of Dairy Science 
ISSN
1525-3198; 0022-0302

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