Swine Anomalies : A fine genetic analysis of congenital diseases in pig. – SwAn
The most important congenital genetic defects that occur in piglets are hernias (umbilical hernia and inguinal or scrotal hernias), cryptorchidism and splay legs, and to a lesser extent intersexuality, hermaphrodism and anal atresia. They affect on average 3% of the commercial pig populations worldwide. It is important to stress out that, besides the direct economic loss, these defects have a serious impact on animal welfare and health. Some of the defects cause direct piglet mortality, while others lead to culling of piglets showing the disorder. For most of these defects there are strong indications for a genetic component. In SwAn project, we propose to focus on the identification of genes underlying congenital / hereditary disorders in pigs. We propose (1) to enrich the collection of affected samples, (2) to use genome-wide association studies (GWA) with a SNP panel comprising 60 000 markers covering the entire genome at a density which is appropriate for population-based association studies, (3) to identify some of the causal mutations and genes of these congenital diseases and (4) to propose effective marker assisted selection (MAS) against genetic defects.
Project coordination
Organisme de recherche
The author of this summary is the project coordinator, who is responsible for the content of this summary. The ANR declines any responsibility as for its contents.
Partnership
Help of the ANR 433,827 euros
Beginning and duration of the scientific project:
- 48 Months