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1.
Genet Mol Res ; 10(3): 2230-44, 2011 Sep 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21968730

RESUMEN

Two analyses, cubic and piecewise random regression, were conducted to model growth of crossbred cattle from birth to about two years of age, investigating the ability of a piecewise procedure to fit growth traits without the complications of the cubic model. During a four-year period (1994-1997) of the Australian "Southern Crossbreeding Project", mature Hereford cows (N = 581) were mated to 97 sires of Angus, Belgian Blue, Hereford, Jersey, Limousin, South Devon, and Wagyu breeds, resulting in 1141 steers and heifers born over four years. Data included 13 (for steers) and eight (for heifers) live body weight measurements, made approximately every 50 days from birth until slaughter. The mixed model included fixed effects of sex, sire breed, age (linear, quadratic and cubic), and their interactions between sex and sire breed with age. Random effects were sire, dam, management (birth location, year, post-weaning groups), and permanent environmental effects and for each of these when possible, their interactions with linear, quadratic and cubic growth. In both models, body weights of all breeds increased over pre-weaning period, held fairly steady (slightly flattening) over the dry season then increased again towards the end of the feedlot period. The number of estimated parameters for the cubic model was 22 while for the piecewise model it was 32. It was concluded that the piecewise model was very similar to the cubic model in the fit to the data; with the piecewise model being marginally better. The piecewise model seems to fit the data better at the end of the growth period.


Asunto(s)
Crianza de Animales Domésticos , Bovinos/crecimiento & desarrollo , Cruzamientos Genéticos , Modelos Biológicos , Animales , Peso Corporal , Cruzamiento , Bovinos/genética , Hibridación Genética , Análisis de Regresión
2.
Genet Mol Res ; 10(1): 433-47, 2011 Mar 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21425094

RESUMEN

A joint growth-carcass model using random regression was used to estimate the (co)variance components of beef cattle body weights and carcass quality traits and correlations between them. During a four-year period (1994-1997) of the Australian "southern crossbreeding project", mature Hereford cows (N = 581) were mated to 97 sires of Jersey, Wagyu, Angus, Hereford, South Devon, Limousin, and Belgian Blue breeds, resulting in 1141 calves. Data included 13 (for steers) and 8 (for heifers) body weight measurements approximately every 50 days from birth until slaughter and four carcass quality traits: hot standard carcass weight, rump fat depth, rib eye muscle area, and intramuscular fat content. The mixed model included fixed effects of sex, sire breed, age (linear, quadratic and cubic), and their interactions between sex and sire breed with age. Random effects were sire, dam, management (birth location, year, post-weaning groups), and permanent environmental effects, and their interactions with linear, quadratic and cubic growth, when possible. Phenotypic, sire and dam correlations between body weights and hot standard carcass weight and rib eye muscle area were positive and moderate to high from birth to feedlot period. Management variation accounted for the largest proportion of total variation in both growth and carcass traits. Management correlations between carcass traits were high, except between rump fat depth and intramuscular fat (r = 0.26). Management correlations between body weight and carcass traits during the pre-weaning period were positive except for intramuscular fat. The correlations were low from birth to weaning, then increased dramatically and were high during the feedlot period.


Asunto(s)
Hibridación Genética/genética , Carne , Animales , Cruzamiento , Bovinos , Análisis de Regresión
3.
Genet Mol Res ; 10(1): 448-58, 2011 Mar 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21425095

RESUMEN

A joint growth-carcass analysis was conducted to develop equations for predicting carcass quality traits associated with variation in growth path of crossbred cattle. During a four-year period (1994-1997) of the Australian "Southern Crossbreeding Project", mature Hereford cows (r = 581) were mated to 97 sires of Jersey, Wagyu, Angus, Hereford, South Devon, Limousin, and Belgian Blue breeds, resulting in 1141 calves. Data included body weight measurements of steers and heifers from birth until slaughter and four carcass quality traits: hot standard carcass weight, rump fat depth, rib eye muscle area, and intramuscular fat content. The model provides nine outputs: median and mean of carcass quality traits, predicted means, and lower and upper confidence intervals, as well as predicted intervals of carcass quality traits (95%) and economic values for domestic market and export markets. Input to the model consists of sex, sire breeds, age (in days)-weight (kg) pairs and slaughter age (500 days for heifer and 700 days for steers). The prediction model is able to accommodate different sexes across seven sire breeds and various management groups at any slaughter age. Its strength lies in its simplicity and flexibility, desirable to accommodate producers with different management schemes. In general, fat depth and intramuscular fat were found to be more affected by differences in growth rate than hot carcass weight and eye muscle area. Also, export market value was more sensitive to growth rate modifications than domestic market value. This model provides a tool by which the producer can estimate the impact of management decisions.


Asunto(s)
Carne , Animales , Peso Corporal , Cruzamiento , Bovinos , Hibridación Genética
4.
Theor Appl Genet ; 121(5): 877-94, 2010 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20490443

RESUMEN

Worldwide, dryland salinity is a major limitation to crop production. Breeding for salinity tolerance could be an effective way of improving yield and yield stability on saline-sodic soils of dryland agriculture. However, this requires a good understanding of inheritance of this quantitative trait. In the present study, a doubled-haploid bread wheat population (Berkut/Krichauff) was grown in supported hydroponics to identify quantitative trait loci (QTL) associated with salinity tolerance traits commonly reported in the literature (leaf symptoms, tiller number, seedling biomass, chlorophyll content, and shoot Na(+) and K(+) concentrations), understand the relationships amongst these traits, and determine their genetic value for marker-assisted selection. There was considerable segregation within the population for all traits measured. With a genetic map of 527 SSR-, DArT- and gene-based markers, a total of 40 QTL were detected for all seven traits. For the first time in a cereal species, a QTL interval for Na(+) exclusion (wPt-3114-wmc170) was associated with an increase (10%) in seedling biomass. Of the five QTL identified for Na(+) exclusion, two were co-located with seedling biomass (2A and 6A). The 2A QTL appears to coincide with the previously reported Na(+) exclusion locus in durum wheat that hosts one active HKT1;4 (Nax1) and one inactive HKT1;4 gene. Using these sequences as template for primer design enabled mapping of at least three HKT1;4 genes onto chromosome 2AL in bread wheat, suggesting that bread wheat carries more HKT1;4 gene family members than durum wheat. However, the combined effects of all Na(+) exclusion loci only accounted for 18% of the variation in seedling biomass under salinity stress indicating that there were other mechanisms of salinity tolerance operative at the seedling stage in this population. Na(+) and K(+) accumulation appear under separate genetic control. The molecular markers wmc170 (2A) and cfd080 (6A) are expected to facilitate breeding for salinity tolerance in bread wheat, the latter being associated with seedling vigour.


Asunto(s)
Pan , Sitios de Carácter Cuantitativo/genética , Salinidad , Plantones/crecimiento & desarrollo , Plantones/genética , Sodio/metabolismo , Estrés Fisiológico/genética , Triticum/genética , Adaptación Fisiológica/genética , Biomasa , Cruzamiento , Clorofila/metabolismo , Mapeo Cromosómico , Segregación Cromosómica/genética , Cromosomas de las Plantas/genética , Marcadores Genéticos , Brotes de la Planta/metabolismo , Potasio/metabolismo , Carácter Cuantitativo Heredable , Triticum/crecimiento & desarrollo
5.
Pak J Biol Sci ; 12(3): 222-30, 2009 Feb 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19579950

RESUMEN

In order to investigate variation in carcass quality traits, during a four-year period, mature Hereford cows (637) were mated to 97 sires from seven breeds (Jersey, Wagyu, Angus, Hereford, South Devon, Limousin and Belgian Blue), resulting in 1144 calves. Carcass production traits (carcass weight = HCWt, fat depth = P8, eye muscle area = EMA, intramuscular fat = IMF) were obtained from these cattle that constitute the Australia's Southern Crossbreeding Project. Data were analysed using multi-variate sire model containing fixed effects of sex, sire breed, slaughter age nested within sexes. Random effects were sire, dam, management (location-year-post-weaning groups) and environmental effects. HCWt of South Devon, Belgian Blue, Limousin and unexpectedly, Angus were the heaviest on the average. Hereford calves were intermediate and Jersey and Wagyu were lighter on the average than others. Carcasses of the Belgian Blue and Limousin had low P8 and IMF, carcasses of Hereford and South Devon were intermediate and Angus, Jersey and Wagyu had high P8 and IMF. Management group effects were greatest especially for EMA and IMF. The sire variation was about 6, 6, 4 and 2% of total variation for HCWt, P8, EMA and IMF. Heritability ranged from 0.20 to 0.37 (carcass weight). The genetic correlation between the two fat depots was not as high (0.18) as expected. Results from this study suggest that strategies to increase genetic potential for HCWt would increase the genetic potential for EMA but may reduce marbling and tend to slightly increase P8. All phenotypic correlations were positive, although not large.


Asunto(s)
Peso Corporal/genética , Cruzamiento , Bovinos , Cruzamientos Genéticos , Variación Genética , Animales , Bovinos/genética , Bovinos/fisiología , Femenino , Masculino , Fenotipo
6.
J Anim Sci ; 86(5): 1038-46, 2008 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18245504

RESUMEN

This study investigated the effects of a SNP in the myostatin gene (MSTN or growth differentiation factor 8, GDF8) on birth, growth, carcass, and beef quality traits in Australia (Aust.) and New Zealand (NZ). The SNP is a cytosine to adenine transversion in exon 1, causing an amino acid substitution of leucine for phenylalanine(94) (F94L). The experiment used crosses between the Jersey and Limousin breeds, with the design being a backcross using first-cross bulls of Jersey x Limousin or Limousin x Jersey breeding, mated to Jersey and Limousin cows. Progeny were genotyped for the myostatin SNP and phenotyped in Aust., with finishing on feedlot (366 calves, over 3 birth years) and in NZ with finishing on pasture (416 calves, over 2 birth years). The effect of the F94L allele (A allele) on birth and growth traits was not significant. The F94L allele in Limousin backcross calves was associated with an increase in meat weight (7.3 and 5.9% of the trait mean in Aust. and NZ, respectively, P < 0.001), and a reduction in fat depth (-13.9 and -18.7% of the trait means on live calves (600 d) and carcasses, respectively, Aust. only, P < 0.001), intramuscular fat content (-8.2% of the trait mean in Aust., P < 0.05; -7.1% in NZ, not significant), total carcass fat weight (-16.5 and -8.1% of the trait mean, Aust. and NZ; P < 0.001 and P < 0.05, respectively). Meat tenderness, pH, and cooking loss of the M. longissimus dorsi were not affected by the F94L variant. In the Jersey backcross calves, additive and dominance effects were confounded because the F94L allele was not segregating in the Jersey dams. The combined effects, however, were significant on LM area (4.4% in both Aust., P < 0.05, and NZ, P < 0.01), channel fat (-11.7%, NZ only, P < 0.01), rib fat depth (-11.2%, NZ only, P < 0.05), and carcass fat weight (-7.1%, NZ only, P < 0.05). The results provide strong evidence that this myostatin F94L variant provides an intermediate and more useful phenotype than the more severe double-muscling phenotype caused by knockout mutations in the myostatin gene.


Asunto(s)
Sustitución de Aminoácidos/genética , Composición Corporal/genética , Bovinos/crecimiento & desarrollo , Bovinos/genética , Músculo Esquelético/crecimiento & desarrollo , Factor de Crecimiento Transformador beta/genética , Alelos , Animales , Animales Recién Nacidos/genética , Animales Recién Nacidos/crecimiento & desarrollo , Cruzamiento , Cruzamientos Genéticos , Femenino , Genotipo , Leucina/genética , Masculino , Carne/normas , Miostatina , Fenotipo , Fenilalanina/genética , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple
7.
Biometrics ; 54(2): 401-15, 1998 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9629635

RESUMEN

In longitudinal studies, the effect of various treatments over time is usually of prime interest. However, observations on the same subject are usually correlated and any analysis should account for the underlying covariance structure. A nonparametric estimate of the covariance structure is useful, either as a guide to the formulation of a parametric model or as the basis for formal inference without imposing parametric assumptions. The sample covariance matrix provides such an estimate when the data consist of a short sequence of measurements at a common set of time points on each of many subjects but is impractical when the data are severely unbalanced or when the sequences of measurements on individual subjects are long relative to the number of subjects. The variogram of residuals from a saturated model for the mean response has previously been suggested as a nonparametric estimator for covariance structure assuming stationarity. In this paper, we consider kernel weighted local linear regression smoothing of sample variogram ordinates and of squared residuals to provide a nonparametric estimator for the covariance structure without assuming stationarity. The value of the estimator as a diagnostic tool is demonstrated in two applications, one to a set of data concerning the blood pressure of newborn babies in an intensive care unit and the other to data on the time evolution of CD4 cell numbers in HIV seroconverters. The use of the estimator in more formal statistical inferences concerning the mean profiles requires further study.


Asunto(s)
Estudios Longitudinales , Modelos Estadísticos , Fármacos Anti-VIH/uso terapéutico , Bisexualidad , Presión Sanguínea , Recuento de Linfocito CD4 , Infecciones por VIH/tratamiento farmacológico , Infecciones por VIH/inmunología , Seropositividad para VIH/tratamiento farmacológico , Seropositividad para VIH/inmunología , Homosexualidad Masculina , Humanos , Recién Nacido , Recien Nacido Prematuro/fisiología , Masculino , Estudios Multicéntricos como Asunto , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Estadísticas no Paramétricas , Zidovudina/uso terapéutico
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