| Literature DB >> 29394137 |
Jie Li1, Sarantsetseg Erdenee2, Shaoli Zhang1, Zhenyu Wei2, Meng Zhang2, Yunyun Jin2, Hui Wu2, Hong Chen3, Xiuzhu Sun2, Hongwei Xu4, Yong Cai4, Xianyong Lan2.
Abstract
Prion protein (PRNP) gene is well known for affecting mammal transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE), and is also reported to regulate phenotypic traits (e.g. growth traits) in healthy ruminants. To identify the insertion/deletion (indel) variations of the PRNP gene and evaluate their effects on growth traits, 768 healthy individuals from five sheep breeds located in China and Mongolia were identified and analyzed. Herein, four novel indel polymorphisms, namely, Intron-1-insertion-7bp (I1-7bp), Intron-2-insertion-15bp (I2-15bp), Intron-2-insertion-19bp (I2-19bp), and 3' UTR-insertion-7bp (3' UTR-7bp), were found in the sheep PRNP gene. In five analyzed breeds, the minor allelic frequencies (MAF) of the above indels were in the range of 0.008 to 0.986 (I1-7bp), 0.113 to 0.336 (I2-15bp), 0.281 to 0.510 (I2-19bp), and 0.040 to 0.238 (3' UTR-7bp). Additionally, there were 15 haplotypes and the haplotype 'II2-15bp-D3'UTR-7bp-DI2-19bp-DI1-7bp' had the highest frequency, which varied from 0.464 to 0.629 in five breeds. Moreover, association analysis revealed that all novel indel polymorphisms were significantly associated with 13 different growth traits (P < 0.05). Particularly, the influences of I2-15bp on chest width (P = 0.001) in Small Tail Han sheep (ewe), 3' UTR-7bp on chest circumference (P = 0.003) in Hu sheep, and I2-19bp on tail length (P = 0.001) in Tong sheep, were highly significant (P < 0.01). These findings may be a further step toward the detection of indel-based typing within and across sheep breeds, and of promising target loci for accelerating the progress of marker-assisted selection in sheep breeding.Entities:
Keywords: PRNP gene; association; growth traits; insertion/deletion (indel); sheep
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29394137 PMCID: PMC5871074 DOI: 10.1080/19336896.2017.1405886
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prion ISSN: 1933-6896 Impact factor: 3.931