Genetics of tibia bone properties of crossbred commercial laying hens in different housing systems
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Johnsson, Martin; Benavides Reyes, Cristina; Domínguez Gasca, Nazaret; Sánchez Rodríguez, Estefanía; Rodríguez Navarro, AlejandroEditorial
Oxford University Press
Materia
Bone Quantitative genetics Gene-by-environment
Fecha
2022-12-01Referencia bibliográfica
Martin Johnsson... [et al.]. Genetics of tibia bone properties of crossbred commercial laying hens in different housing systems, G3 Genes|Genomes|Genetics, 2022;, jkac302, [https://doi.org/10.1093/g3journal/jkac302]
Resumen
Osteoporosis and bone fractures are a severe problem for the welfare of laying hens, with genetics and environment, such as housing
system, each making substantial contributions to bone strength. In this work, we performed genetic analyses of bone strength, bone
mineral density, and bone composition, as well as body weight, in 860 commercial crossbred laying hens from 2 different companies,
kept in either furnished cages or floor pens. We compared bone traits between housing systems and crossbreds and performed a genome-
wide association study of bone properties and body weight. As expected, the 2 housing systems produced a large difference in
bone strength, with layers housed in floor pens having stronger bones. These differences were accompanied by differences in bone
geometry, mineralization, and chemical composition. Genome scans either combining or independently analyzing the 2 housing systems
revealed no genome-wide significant loci for bone breaking strength. We detected 3 loci for body weight that were shared between
the housing systems on chromosomes 4, 6, and 27 (either genome-wide significant or suggestive) and these coincide with
associations for bone length. In summary, we found substantial differences in bone strength, content, and composition between
hens kept in floor pens and furnished cages that could be attributed to greater physical activity in pen housing. We found little evidence
for large-effect loci for bone strength in commercial crossbred hens, consistent with a highly polygenic architecture for bone strength in
the production environment. The lack of consistent genetic associations between housing systems in combination with the differences in
bone phenotypes could be due to gene-by-environment interactions with housing system or a lack of power to detect shared associations
for bone strength.