4.7 Article

Bovine chromosomal regions affecting rheological traits in acid-induced skim milk gels

Journal

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
Volume 98, Issue 2, Pages 1273-1285

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2014-8137

Keywords

acid-induced coagulation; genome-wide association study; milk protein; dairy cattle

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council for Environment, Agricultural Sciences and Spatial Planning (FORMAS), Stockholm, Sweden
  2. Swedish Governmental Agency for Innovation Systems (VINNOVA), Stockholm, Sweden
  3. Swedish Farmers' Foundation for Agricultural Research (SLF), Stockholm, Sweden
  4. Livsmedelsforetagen (Li), Stockholm, Sweden
  5. Svensk Dagligvaruhandel, Stockholm, Sweden
  6. Arla Foods amba, Denmark
  7. SLF, Stockholm, Sweden
  8. Danish Strategic Research Council, Copenhagen, Denmark
  9. Danish Cattle Federation, Aarhus, Denmark
  10. Aarhus University, Denmark

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The production of fermented milk products has increased worldwide during the last decade and is expected to continue to increase during the coming decade. The quality of these products may be optimized through breeding practices; however, the relations between cow genetics and technological properties of acid milk gels are not fully known. Therefore, the aim of this study was to identify chromosomal regions affecting acid-induced coagulation properties and possible candidate genes. Skim milk samples from 377 Swedish Red cows were rheologically analyzed for acid-induced coagulation properties using low-amplitude oscillation measurements. The resulting traits, including gel strength, coagulation time, and yield stress, were used to conduct a genome-wide association study. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) were identified using the BovineHD SNPChip (Illumina Inc., San Diego, CA), resulting in almost 621,000 segregating markers. The genome was scanned for putative quantitative trait loci (QTL) regions, haplotypes based on highly associated SNP were inferred, and the additive genetic effects of haplotypes within each QTL region were analyzed using mixed models. A total of 8 genomic regions were identified, with large effects of the significant haplotype explaining between 4.8 and 9.8% of the phenotypic variance of the studied traits. One major QTL was identified to overlap between gel strength and yield stress, the QTL identified with the most significant SNP closest to the gene coding for.-casein (CSN3). In addition, a chromosome-wide significant region affecting yield stress on BTA 11 was identified to be colocated with PAEP, coding for beta-lactoglobulin. Furthermore, the coagulation properties of the genetic variants within the 2 genes were compared with the coagulation properties identified by the patterns of the haplotypes within the regions, and it was discovered that the haplotypes were more diverse and in one case slightly better at explaining the phenotypic variance. Besides these significant QTL comprising the 2 milk proteins, 3 additional genes are proposed as possible candidates, namely RAB22A, CDH13, and STAT1, and all have previously been found to be expressed in the mammary gland. To our knowledge, this is the first attempt to map QTL regions for acid-induced coagulation properties.

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