Login / Signup

Peptide biomarkers used for the selective breeding of a complex polygenic trait in honey bees.

M Marta GuarnaShelley E HooverElizabeth HuxterHeather HigoKyung-Mee MoonDominik DomanskiMiriam E F BixbyAndony P MelathopoulosAbdullah IbrahimMichael PeirsonSuresh DesaiDerek MicholsonRick WhiteChristoph H BorchersRobert W CurrieStephen F PernalLeonard J Foster
Published in: Scientific reports (2017)
We present a novel way to select for highly polygenic traits. For millennia, humans have used observable phenotypes to selectively breed stronger or more productive livestock and crops. Selection on genotype, using single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and genome profiling, is also now applied broadly in livestock breeding programs; however, selection on protein/peptide or mRNA expression markers has not yet been proven useful. Here we demonstrate the utility of protein markers to select for disease-resistant hygienic behavior in the European honey bee (Apis mellifera L.). Robust, mechanistically-linked protein expression markers, by integrating cis- and trans- effects from many genomic loci, may overcome limitations of genomic markers to allow for selection. After three generations of selection, the resulting marker-selected stock outperformed an unselected benchmark stock in terms of hygienic behavior, and had improved survival when challenged with a bacterial disease or a parasitic mite, similar to bees selected using a phenotype-based assessment for this trait. This is the first demonstration of the efficacy of protein markers for industrial selective breeding in any agricultural species, plant or animal.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • heavy metals
  • public health
  • dna methylation
  • risk assessment
  • climate change
  • human health
  • genome wide association study