Genome-wide association study reveals candidate genes for pollution excreta traits in pigs.
Junjian WangHuawei YangShaokang ChenWeining LiJian YuZhengzheng HuYue ZhuoQianqian HuangZhen LiuLei ZhouJianliang WuZhaojun WangFeng GuoPeng YunXiaofeng WangJian-Feng LiuPublished in: Animal genetics (2023)
Excreta traits comprise a very important characteristic in breeding that have been neglected for a long time. With the growth of intensive pig farming, plenty of environment problems have been raised, and people have begun to pay attention to pig excreta behaviors from genetics and breeding perspectives. However, the genetic architecture of excreta traits remains unclear. To investigate the genetic architecture of excreta traits in pigs, eight excreta traits and feed conversion ratio (FCR) were analyzed in this study. We performed genome-wide association studies (GWASs) on 213 Yorkshire pigs and estimated genetic parameters for a total number of 290 pigs, comprising 213 Yorkshire, 52 Landrace and 25 Duroc. After analysis, eight and 22 genome-wide significant SNPs were detected for FCR and the eight excreta traits in single-trait GWASs separately, and 18 were detected in a multi-trait meta-analysis for excreta traits, six of which were detected in both the single-trait and the multi-trait GWAS. Eighty, 182 and 133 genes were detected within 1 Mb of the genome-wide significant SNPs for FCR, excreta traits and multi-trait meta-analysis, respectively. Five candidate genes (BCKDC, DBT, ANKRD7, SHPRH and HCRT) with biochemical and physiological effects relevant to feed efficiency and excreta traits might be interesting markers for future breeding. Meanwhile, functional enrichment analysis indicates that most of the significant pathways are associated with the glutathione catabolic process, DNA topological change and replication fork protection complex. This study reveals the architecture of excreta traits in commercial pigs and offers an opportunity for decreasing the pollution from excreta using genomic selection in pigs.