A bayesian method for simultaneously detecting mendelian and imprinted quantitative trait loci in experimental crosses of outbred species

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Abstract

Genomic imprinting is interpreted as a phenomenon, in which some genes inherited from one parent are not completely expressed due to modification of the genome caused during gametogenesis. Subsequently, the expression level of an allele at the imprinted gene is changed dependent on the parental origin, which is referred to as the parent-of-origin effect. In livestock, some QTL for reproductive performance and meat productivity have been reported to be imprinted. So far, methods detecting imprinted QTL have been proposed on the basis of interval mapping, where only a single QTL was tested at a time. In this study, we developed a Bayesian method for simultaneously mapping multiple QTL, allowing the inference about expression modes of QTL in an outbred F2 family. The inference about whether a QTL is Mendelian or imprinted was made using Markov chain Monte Carlo estimation by comparing the goodness-of-fits between models, assuming the presence and the absence of parent-of-origin effect at a QTL. We showed by the analyses of simulated data sets that the Bayesian method can effectively detect both Mendelian QTL and imprinted QTL. Copyright © 2008 by the Genetics Society of America.

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Hayashi, T., & Awata, T. (2008). A bayesian method for simultaneously detecting mendelian and imprinted quantitative trait loci in experimental crosses of outbred species. Genetics, 178(1), 527–538. https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.107.081521

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