학술논문

Genetic Foundation of Male Spur Length and Its Correlation with Female Egg Production in Chickens.
Document Type
Article
Source
Animals (2076-2615). Jun2024, Vol. 14 Issue 12, p1780. 10p.
Subject
*AGRICULTURAL egg production
*EGGS
*POULTRY breeding
*CHICKENS
*GENOME-wide association studies
*GENETICS
Language
ISSN
2076-2615
Abstract
Simple Summary: The spur refers to the protrusion near the tarsometatarsus on both sides of the calves of chickens, and their length varies from individual to individual. By analyzing phenotypic measurement results, we found that there were significant variations in spur length in layers. After calculating heritability, we found that spur length had a high level of heritability in the population, which also proved that this quantitative trait was controlled by multiple genes. Subsequently, we utilized genomic sequencing to identify candidate genes associated with spur length. As is known to all, the genetic material passed from parents to all siblings is similar, but some gender-biased traits such as spurs and egg-laying only show in one gender. We also attempted to find a connection between these two traits in this article. Spurs, which mainly appear in roosters, are protrusions near the tarsometatarsus on both sides of the calves of chickens, and are connected to the tarsometatarsus by a bony core. As a male-biased morphological characteristic, the diameter and length of spurs vary significantly between different individuals, mainly related to genetics and age. As a specific behavior of hens, egg-laying also varies greatly between individuals in terms of traits such as age at first egg (AFE), egg weight (EW), and so on. At present, there are few studies on chicken spurs. In this study, we investigated the inheritance pattern of the spur trait in roosters with different phenotypes and the correlations between spur length, body weight at 18 weeks of age (BW18), shank length at 18 weeks of age (SL18), and the egg-laying trait in hens (both hens and roosters were from the same population and were grouped according to their family). These traits related to egg production included AFE, body weight at first egg (BWA), and first egg weight (FEW). We estimated genetic parameters based on pedigree and phenotype data, and used variance analysis to calculate broad-sense heritability for correcting the parameter estimation results. The results showed that the heritability of male left and right spurs ranged from 0.6 to 0.7. There were significant positive correlations between left and right spur length, BW18, SL18, and BWA, as well as between left and right spur length and AFE. We selected 35 males with the longest spurs and 35 males with the shortest spurs in the population, and pooled them into two sets to obtain the pooled genome sequencing data. After genome-wide association and genome divergency analysis by FST, allele frequency differences (AFDs), and XPEHH methods, we identified 7 overlapping genes (CENPE, FAT1, FAM149A, MANBA, NFKB1, SORBS2, UBE2D3) and 14 peak genes (SAMD12, TSPAN5, ENSGALG00000050071, ENSGALG00000053133, ENSGALG00000050348, CNTN5, TRPC6, ENSGALG00000047655,TMSB4X, LIX1, CKB, NEBL, PRTFDC1, MLLT10) related to left and right spur length through genome-wide selection signature analysis and a genome-wide association approach. Our results identified candidate genes associated with chicken spurs, which helps to understand the genetic mechanism of this trait and carry out subsequent research around it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]