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  4. No evidence that long runs of homozygosity tend to harbor risk variants for polygenic obesity in Labrador retriever dogs
 
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No evidence that long runs of homozygosity tend to harbor risk variants for polygenic obesity in Labrador retriever dogs

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2022
Author
Szydłowski, Maciej 
Antkowiak, Michał
Faculty
Wydział Medycyny Weterynaryjnej i Nauk o Zwierzętach
Journal
Journal of Applied Genetics
ISSN
1234-1983
DOI
10.1007/s13353-022-00693-0
Volume
63
Number
3
Pages from-to
557-561
Abstract (EN)
Canine polygenic obesity can be influenced by relatively recent mutations with large effects. We determined whether, as with monogenic diseases, long autozygous tracts may be disproportionately likely to harbor detrimental variants for additive polygenic obesity in Labrador retriever dogs. Both our detection of runs of homozygosity (ROH) and our preliminary association study were based on whole-genome sequencing of 28 obese and 22 healthy dogs. We detected and analyzed the distribution of 19,655 ROH. We observed 237 and 98 ROH-harboring genotypes associated with obesity and increased body mass, respectively. We found no evidence that long ROH tend to harbor genotypes linked to obesity or increased body weight, and we concluded that data on ROH overlapping GWAS signals for canine obesity are unlikely to help prioritize candidate genes for validation studies.
Keywords (EN)
  • runs of homozygosity

  • obesity

  • dogs

  • Labrador Retriever

  • whole-genome sequencing

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