A mixture model approach to the mapping of quantitative trait loci in complex populations with an application to multiple cattle families

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Abstract

A mixture model approach is presented for the mapping of one or more quantitative trait loci (QTLs) in complex populations. In order to exploit the full power of complete linkage maps the simultaneous likelihood of phenotype and a multilocus (all markers and putative QTLs) genotype is computed. Maximum likelihood estimation in our mixture models is implemented via an Expectation-Maximization algorithm: exact, stochastic or Monte Carlo EM by using a simple and flexible Gibbs sampler. Parameters include allele frequencies of markers and QTLs, discrete or normal effects of biallelic or multiallelic QTLs, and homogeneous or heterogeneous residual variances. As an illustration a dairy cattle data set consisting of twenty half-sib families has been reanalyzed. We discuss the potential which our and other approaches have for realistic multiple-QTL analyses in complex populations.

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Jansen, R. C., Johnson, D. L., & Van Arendonk, J. A. M. (1998). A mixture model approach to the mapping of quantitative trait loci in complex populations with an application to multiple cattle families. Genetics, 148(1), 391–399. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/148.1.391

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