Genetic variants in mammary development, prolactin signalling and involution pathways explain considerable variation in bovine milk production and milk composition.

Genet Sel Evol

Biosciences Research Division, Department of Primary Industries Victoria, AgriBio, 5 Ring Road, Bundoora 3086, Australia.

Published: April 2014

AI Article Synopsis

Article Abstract

Background: The maintenance of lactation in mammals is the result of a balance between competing signals from mammary development, prolactin signalling and involution pathways. Dairy cattle are an interesting case study to investigate the effect of polymorphisms that affect the function of genes in these pathways. In dairy cattle, lactation yields and milk composition (for example protein percentage and fat percentage) are routinely recorded, and these vary greatly between individuals. In this study, we test 8058 single nucleotide polymorphisms in or close to genes in these pathways for association with milk production traits and determine the proportion of variance explained by each pathway, using data on 16 812 dairy cattle, including Holstein-Friesian and Jersey bulls and cows.

Results: Single nucleotide polymorphisms close to genes in the mammary development, prolactin signalling and involution pathways were significantly associated with milk production traits. The involution pathway explained the largest proportion of genetic variation for production traits. The mammary development pathway also explained additional genetic variation for milk volume, fat percentage and protein percentage.

Conclusions: Genetic variants in the involution pathway explained considerably more genetic variation in milk production traits than expected by chance. Many of the associations for single nucleotide polymorphisms in genes in this pathway have not been detected in conventional genome-wide association studies. The pathway approach used here allowed us to identify some novel candidates for further studies that will be aimed at refining the location of associated genomic regions and identifying polymorphisms contributing to variation in lactation volume and milk composition.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4036308PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1297-9686-46-29DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

mammary development
16
milk production
16
production traits
16
development prolactin
12
prolactin signalling
12
signalling involution
12
involution pathways
12
milk composition
12
dairy cattle
12
single nucleotide
12

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!