Artículos de revistas
A comparison of methods to estimate genomic relationships using pedigree and markers in livestock populations
Fecha
2016-12Registro en:
Forneris, Natalia Soledad; Steibel, J. P.; Legarra, Andres; Vitezica, Zulma G.; Bates, R. O.; et al.; A comparison of methods to estimate genomic relationships using pedigree and markers in livestock populations; Wiley Blackwell Publishing, Inc; Journal Of Animal Breeding And Genetics-zeitschrift Fur Tierzuchtung Und Zuchtungsbiologie; 133; 6; 12-2016; 452-462
0931-2668
1439-0388
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Forneris, Natalia Soledad
Steibel, J. P.
Legarra, Andres
Vitezica, Zulma G.
Bates, R. O.
Ernst, C. W.
Basso Abraham, Alicia Leonor Rufina
Cantet, Rodolfo Juan Carlos
Resumen
Accurate prediction of breeding values depends on capturing the variability in genome sharing of relatives with the same pedigree relationship. Here, we compare two approaches to set up genomic relationship matrices for precision of genomic relationships (GR) and accuracy of estimated breeding values (GEBV). Real and simulated data (pigs, 60k SNP) were analysed, and GR were estimated using two approaches: (i) identity by state, corrected with either the observed (GVR -O) or the base population (GVR -B) allele frequencies and (ii) identity by descent using linkage analysis (GIBD -L). Estimators were evaluated for precision and empirical bias with respect to true pedigree IBD GR. All three estimators had very low bias. GIBD -L displayed the lowest sampling error and the highest correlation with true genome-shared values. GVR -B approximated GIBD -L's correlation and had lower error than GVR -O. Accuracy of GEBV for selection candidates was significantly higher when GIBD -L was used and identical between GVR -O and GVR -B. In real data, GIBD -L's sampling standard deviation was the closest to the theoretical value for each pedigree relationship. Use of pedigree to calculate GR improved the precision of estimates and the accuracy of GEBV.