International genomic evaluation methods for dairy cattle

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Genomic evaluations are rapidly replacing traditional evaluation systems used for dairy cattle selection. Higher reliabilities from larger genotype files promote cooperation across country borders. Genomic information can be exchange...

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Main Authors: Sullivan Peter G, VanRaden Paul M
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: BMC 2010-03-01
Series:Genetics Selection Evolution
Online Access:http://www.gsejournal.org/content/42/1/7
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author Sullivan Peter G
VanRaden Paul M
author_facet Sullivan Peter G
VanRaden Paul M
author_sort Sullivan Peter G
collection DOAJ
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Genomic evaluations are rapidly replacing traditional evaluation systems used for dairy cattle selection. Higher reliabilities from larger genotype files promote cooperation across country borders. Genomic information can be exchanged across countries using simple conversion equations, by modifying multi-trait across-country evaluation (MACE) to account for correlated residuals originating from the use of foreign evaluations, or by multi-trait analysis of genotypes for countries that use the same reference animals.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Traditional MACE assumes independent residuals because each daughter is measured in only one country. Genomic MACE could account for residual correlations using daughter equivalents from genomic data as a fraction of the total in each country and proportions of bulls shared. MACE methods developed to combine separate within-country genomic evaluations were compared to direct, multi-country analysis of combined genotypes using simulated genomic and phenotypic data for 8,193 bulls in nine countries.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Reliabilities for young bulls were much higher for across-country than within-country genomic evaluations as measured by squared correlations of estimated with true breeding values. Gains in reliability from genomic MACE were similar to those of multi-trait evaluation of genotypes but required less computation. Sharing of reference genotypes among countries created large residual correlations, especially for young bulls, that are accounted for in genomic MACE.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>International genomic evaluations can be computed either by modifying MACE to account for residual correlations across countries or by multi-trait evaluation of combined genotype files. The gains in reliability justify the increased computation but require more cooperation than in previous breeding programs.</p>
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spelling doaj.art-4d7eccd7e3d949f7bf7b4ed8faf082f82022-12-22T03:17:27ZdeuBMCGenetics Selection Evolution0999-193X1297-96862010-03-01421710.1186/1297-9686-42-7International genomic evaluation methods for dairy cattleSullivan Peter GVanRaden Paul M<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Genomic evaluations are rapidly replacing traditional evaluation systems used for dairy cattle selection. Higher reliabilities from larger genotype files promote cooperation across country borders. Genomic information can be exchanged across countries using simple conversion equations, by modifying multi-trait across-country evaluation (MACE) to account for correlated residuals originating from the use of foreign evaluations, or by multi-trait analysis of genotypes for countries that use the same reference animals.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Traditional MACE assumes independent residuals because each daughter is measured in only one country. Genomic MACE could account for residual correlations using daughter equivalents from genomic data as a fraction of the total in each country and proportions of bulls shared. MACE methods developed to combine separate within-country genomic evaluations were compared to direct, multi-country analysis of combined genotypes using simulated genomic and phenotypic data for 8,193 bulls in nine countries.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Reliabilities for young bulls were much higher for across-country than within-country genomic evaluations as measured by squared correlations of estimated with true breeding values. Gains in reliability from genomic MACE were similar to those of multi-trait evaluation of genotypes but required less computation. Sharing of reference genotypes among countries created large residual correlations, especially for young bulls, that are accounted for in genomic MACE.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>International genomic evaluations can be computed either by modifying MACE to account for residual correlations across countries or by multi-trait evaluation of combined genotype files. The gains in reliability justify the increased computation but require more cooperation than in previous breeding programs.</p>http://www.gsejournal.org/content/42/1/7
spellingShingle Sullivan Peter G
VanRaden Paul M
International genomic evaluation methods for dairy cattle
Genetics Selection Evolution
title International genomic evaluation methods for dairy cattle
title_full International genomic evaluation methods for dairy cattle
title_fullStr International genomic evaluation methods for dairy cattle
title_full_unstemmed International genomic evaluation methods for dairy cattle
title_short International genomic evaluation methods for dairy cattle
title_sort international genomic evaluation methods for dairy cattle
url http://www.gsejournal.org/content/42/1/7
work_keys_str_mv AT sullivanpeterg internationalgenomicevaluationmethodsfordairycattle
AT vanradenpaulm internationalgenomicevaluationmethodsfordairycattle