| Literature DB >> 20105297 |
Ole F Christensen1, Mogens S Lund.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of genomic selection in breeding programs may increase the rate of genetic improvement, reduce the generation time, and provide higher accuracy of estimated breeding values (EBVs). A number of different methods have been developed for genomic prediction of breeding values, but many of them assume that all animals have been genotyped. In practice, not all animals are genotyped, and the methods have to be adapted to this situation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20105297 PMCID: PMC2834608 DOI: 10.1186/1297-9686-42-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Sel Evol ISSN: 0999-193X Impact factor: 4.297
Figure 1The profile log-likelihood curve for . The dotted line corresponds to a the 95% quantile for a χ2(1) distribution, and provides a 5% confidence interval of [0; 0.06] for w.
Results from model with = 0.01.
| Method | Cor. true BV | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| one-step | 4.16 | 16.22 | 0.6598 |
| ped | 5.03 | 15.80 | 0.3537 |
| two-step | 7.56 | 0.069 | 0.5869 |
| one-step-2 | 5.98 | 15.58 | 0.6596 |
Method one-step is the method advocated in this paper, method ped uses the pedigree based relationship matrix, and method two-step is the genomic prediction method using only genotyped animals (note that parameter estimates for this method cannot be compared to parameter estimates from the other two methods). Finally, one-step-2 differs from one-step in that it ignores the markers of selection candidates in the parameter estimation. The right-most column shows the correlation between the estimated and the true breeding value (BV).