Identification of candidate genes associated with milk production and mastitis based on transcriptome‐wide association study

Author:

Hosseinzadeh Sevda1,Rafat Seyed Abbas1ORCID,Javanmard Arash1,Fang Lingzhao2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Animal Science, Faculty of Agriculture University of Tabriz Tabriz Iran

2. MRC Human Genetics Unit at the Institute of Genetics and Molecular Medicine The University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

Abstract

AbstractGenetic research for the assessment of mastitis and milk production traits simultaneously has a long history. The main issue that arises in this context is the known existence of a positive correlation between the risk of mastitis and lactation performance due to selection. The transcriptome‐wide association study (TWAS) approach endeavors to combine the expression quantitative trait loci and genome‐wide association study summary statistics to decode complex traits or diseases. Accordingly, we used the farmgtex project results as a complete bovine database for mastitis and milk production. The results of colocalization and TWAS approaches were used for the detection of functional associated candidate genes with milk production and mastitis traits on multiple tissue‐based transcriptome records. Also, we used the david database for gene ontology to identify significant terms and associated genes. For the identification of interaction networks, the genemania and string databases were used. Also, the available z‐scores in TWAS results were used for the calculation of the correlation between tissues. Therefore, the present results confirm that LYNX1, DGAT1, C14H8orf33, and LY6E were identified as significant genes associated with milk production in eight, six, five, and five tissues, respectively. Also, FBXL6 was detected as a significant gene associated with mastitis trait. CLN3 and ZNF34 genes emerged via both the colocalization and TWAS approaches as significant genes for milk production trait. It is expected that TWAS and colocalization can improve our perception of the potential health status control mechanism in high‐yielding dairy cows.

Publisher

Wiley

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