The purpose of the study was to estimate the heritability of residual feed consumption (RFC) and ... more The purpose of the study was to estimate the heritability of residual feed consumption (RFC) and the genetic correlations between RFC and economically important traits. The genetic progress after four generations of selection for RFC and the changes in economically important traits were also investigated. A selection experiment for RFC was carried out from 1983 to 1987. The total data consisted of 3,750 birds and 2,661 records. The (co)variance components were calculated using derivative-free bivariate animal model restricted maximum likelihood (REML). Breeding values were estimated for calculating genetic progress in RFC and correlated responses in the other traits. The heritability of RFC calculated from the whole recorded period (16 to 42 wk) and using all 2,661 records was .46 (+/- .04). The genetic correlations between RFC and egg mass, number of eggs, egg weight, and body weight were not significant. The genetic correlation between RFC and feed consumption was .50 (+/- .04). The breeding value estimates indicated a moderate genetic progress in RFC due to selection. Feed consumption was decreased and body weight gain showed reduction in the last two generations. No change could be found in egg mass, number of eggs, egg weight, age at first egg, or body weight.
We investigated potential effects of parent-of-origin specific quantitative trait loci (QTL) in c... more We investigated potential effects of parent-of-origin specific quantitative trait loci (QTL) in chicken. Two divergent egg-layer lines differing in egg quality were reciprocally crossed to produce 305 F2 hens. Searching the genome using models with uni-parental expression, we identified four genome-wide significant QTL with parent-of-origin effects and three highly suggestive QTL affecting age at first egg, egg weight, number of eggs, body weight, feed intake, and egg white quality. None of these QTL had been detected previously using Mendelian models. Two genome-wide significant and one highly suggestive QTL show exclusive paternal expression while the others show exclusive maternal expression. Each of the parent-of-origin specific QTL explained 3-5 % of the total phenotypic variance, with the effects ranging from 0.18 to 0.4 phenotypic SD in the F2. Using simulations and further detailed analyses, it was shown that departure from fixation in the founder lines, grand-maternal effects (i.e. mitochondrial or W-linked) and Z-linked QTL were unlikely to give rise to any spurious parent-of-origin effects. The present results suggest that QTL with parent-of-origin specific expression are a plausible explanation for some reciprocal effects in poultry and deserve more attention. An intriguing hypothesis is whether these effects could be the result of genomic imprinting, which is often assumed to be unique to eutherian mammals.
The purpose of the study was to estimate the heritability of residual feed consumption (RFC) and ... more The purpose of the study was to estimate the heritability of residual feed consumption (RFC) and the genetic correlations between RFC and economically important traits. The genetic progress after four generations of selection for RFC and the changes in economically important traits were also investigated. A selection experiment for RFC was carried out from 1983 to 1987. The total data consisted of 3,750 birds and 2,661 records. The (co)variance components were calculated using derivative-free bivariate animal model restricted maximum likelihood (REML). Breeding values were estimated for calculating genetic progress in RFC and correlated responses in the other traits. The heritability of RFC calculated from the whole recorded period (16 to 42 wk) and using all 2,661 records was .46 (+/- .04). The genetic correlations between RFC and egg mass, number of eggs, egg weight, and body weight were not significant. The genetic correlation between RFC and feed consumption was .50 (+/- .04). The breeding value estimates indicated a moderate genetic progress in RFC due to selection. Feed consumption was decreased and body weight gain showed reduction in the last two generations. No change could be found in egg mass, number of eggs, egg weight, age at first egg, or body weight.
We investigated potential effects of parent-of-origin specific quantitative trait loci (QTL) in c... more We investigated potential effects of parent-of-origin specific quantitative trait loci (QTL) in chicken. Two divergent egg-layer lines differing in egg quality were reciprocally crossed to produce 305 F2 hens. Searching the genome using models with uni-parental expression, we identified four genome-wide significant QTL with parent-of-origin effects and three highly suggestive QTL affecting age at first egg, egg weight, number of eggs, body weight, feed intake, and egg white quality. None of these QTL had been detected previously using Mendelian models. Two genome-wide significant and one highly suggestive QTL show exclusive paternal expression while the others show exclusive maternal expression. Each of the parent-of-origin specific QTL explained 3-5 % of the total phenotypic variance, with the effects ranging from 0.18 to 0.4 phenotypic SD in the F2. Using simulations and further detailed analyses, it was shown that departure from fixation in the founder lines, grand-maternal effects (i.e. mitochondrial or W-linked) and Z-linked QTL were unlikely to give rise to any spurious parent-of-origin effects. The present results suggest that QTL with parent-of-origin specific expression are a plausible explanation for some reciprocal effects in poultry and deserve more attention. An intriguing hypothesis is whether these effects could be the result of genomic imprinting, which is often assumed to be unique to eutherian mammals.
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Papers by M. Tuiskula-Haavisto