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Abstract

Fragile foal syndrome (FFS) is a disease caused by a recessive lethal missense mutation in the PLOD1 gene located on ECA2. Despite its harmful effect, a relatively high frequency of FFS carriers was observed in Warmblood breeds spanning from 7.4% in a random sample of Swedish Warmblood breed to 17% in the Hanoverian and Danish Warmblood, indicating potential heterozygous advantage. Balancing selection can be further studied based on haplotype blocks and via detection of heterozygosity-rich region (ROHet) around the target of selection. In this study we evaluated the presence of haplotype blocks and ROHet on ECA2 in 380 Swedish Warmblood horses. We compared the results of ROHet with the rest of the genome. On average, 11.7 heterozygosity rich regions were identified per horse on ECA2, with no significant difference in numbers and length compared to what was found in other chromosomes. A unique haplotype block containing 28 markers was found in the FFS haplotype, while there were several haplotype blocks in the non-carrier haplotype. This unique haplotype block mostly spanned the region upstream of the PLOD1 gene and included the MFN2 gene. The presence of this extended haplotype, shared by multiple individuals and including both the FFS variant and the MFN2 gene, suggests that this region may be under selection. While we did not find a clear heterozygosity-rich region around the FFS variant, the extended haplotype may reflect either a signature of balancing selection or linkage disequilibrium with a positively selected variant in MFN2, PLOD1, or nearby loci.

Keywords

balancing selection; extended haplotype; MFN2; PLOD1

Published in

Animal Genetics
2025, volume: 56, number: 3, article number: e70022
Publisher: WILEY

SLU Authors

UKÄ Subject classification

Animal and Dairy Science
Genetics and Genomics

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/age.70022

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/142967