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Using high-density SNP data to unravel the origin of the Franches-Montagnes horse breed. | LitMetric

Using high-density SNP data to unravel the origin of the Franches-Montagnes horse breed.

Genet Sel Evol

Animal GenoPhenomics, Agroscope, Route de la Tioleyre 4, 1725, Posieux, Switzerland.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The Franches-Montagnes (FM) is Switzerland's last native horse breed, created in the 19th century through cross-breeding local mares and Anglo-Norman stallions, with a study analyzing genetic data from 522 FM horses and various other breeds to explore population structure and genetic diversity.
  • A three-step approach revealed distinct population substructures within the FM breed linked to genetic origins and influential sires, with admixture from Thoroughbreds being prominent and decreased genetic variance associated with older-type horses.
  • The study showed FM horses have lower inbreeding levels compared to other breeds, but some long segments of homozygosity indicate a potential loss of genetic diversity, with specific genes linked to desirable traits in breeding

Article Abstract

Background: The Franches-Montagnes (FM) is the last native horse breed of Switzerland, established at the end of the 19th century by cross-breeding local mares with Anglo-Norman stallions. We collected high-density SNP genotype data (Axiom™ 670 K Equine genotyping array) from 522 FM horses, including 44 old-type horses (OF), 514 European Warmblood horses (WB) from Sweden and Switzerland (including a stallion used for cross-breeding in 1990), 136 purebred Arabians (AR), 32 Shagya Arabians (SA), and 64 Thoroughbred (TB) horses, as introgressed WB stallions showed TB origin in their pedigrees. The aim of the study was to ascertain fine-scale population structures of the FM breed, including estimation of individual admixture levels and genomic inbreeding (F) by means of Runs of Homozygosity.

Results: To assess fine-scale population structures within the FM breed, we applied a three-step approach, which combined admixture, genetic contribution, and F of individuals into a high-resolution network visualization. Based on this approach, we were able to demonstrate that population substructures, as detected by model-based clustering, can be either associated with a different genetic origin or with the progeny of most influential sires. Within the FM breed, admixed horses explained most of the genetic variance of the current breeding population, while OF horses only accounted for a small proportion of the variance. Furthermore, we illustrated that FM horses showed high TB admixture levels and we identified inconsistencies in the origin of FM horses descending from the Arabian stallion Doktryner. With the exception of WB, FM horses were less inbred compared to the other breeds. However, the relatively few but long ROH segments suggested diversity loss in both FM subpopulations. Genes located in FM- and OF-specific ROH islands had known functions involved in conformation and behaviour, two traits that are highly valued by breeders.

Conclusions: The FM remains the last native Swiss breed, clearly distinguishable from other historically introgressed breeds, but it suffered bottlenecks due to intensive selection of stallions, restrictive mating choices based on arbitrary definitions of pure breeding, and selection of rare coat colours. To preserve the genetic diversity of FM horses, future conservation managements strategies should involve a well-balanced selection of stallions (e.g., by integrating OF stallions in the FM breeding population) and avoid selection for rare coat colours.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11238448PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12711-024-00922-6DOI Listing

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