Agriculture, School of Natural and Environmental Sciences, University of Newcastle, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU, UK.
JSR Genetics, Southburn, Driffield, East Yorkshire, YO25 9ED, UK.
Genet Sel Evol. 2018 Sep 18;50(1):46. doi: 10.1186/s12711-018-0417-7.
In polytocous livestock species, litter size and offspring weight act antagonistically; in modern pig breeds, selection for increased litter size has resulted in lower mean birth weights, an increased number of small piglets and an increased number of those affected by varying degrees of intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR). IUGR poses life-long challenges, both mental, with morphological brain changes and altered cognition, and physical, such as immaturity of organs, reduced colostrum intake and weight gain. In pigs, head morphology of newborn piglets is a good phenotypic marker for identifying such compromised piglets. Growth retardation could be considered as a property of the dam, in part due to either uterine capacity or insufficiency. A novel approach to this issue is to consider the proportion of IUGR-affected piglets in a litter as an indirect measure of uterine capacity. However, uterine capacity or sufficiency cannot be equated solely to litter size and thus is a trait difficult to measure on farm.
A total of 21,159 Landrace × Large White or Landrace × White Duroc piglets (born over 52 weeks) with recorded head morphology and birth weights were followed from birth until death or weaning. At the piglet level, the estimated heritability for IUGR (as defined by head morphology) was low at 0.01 ± 0.01. Piglet direct genetic effects of birth weight (h = 0.07 ± 0.02) were strongly negatively correlated with head morphology (- 0.93), in that IUGR-affected piglets tended to have lower birth weights. At the sow level, analysis of the proportion of IUGR-affected piglets in a litter gave a heritability of 0.20 ± 0.06, with high and negative genetic correlations of the proportion of IUGR-affected piglets with average offspring birth weight (- 0.90) and with the proportion of piglets surviving until 24 h (- 0.80).
This suggests that the proportion of IUGR-affected piglets in a litter is a suitable indirect measure of uterine capacity for inclusion in breeding programmes that aim at reducing IUGR in piglets and improving piglet survival.
在多胎家畜物种中,胎仔数和初生重呈负相关;在现代猪品种中,为了增加胎仔数而进行的选择导致平均初生重降低,小仔猪数量增加,以及受不同程度宫内生长迟缓(IUGR)影响的仔猪数量增加。IUGR 带来了终生的挑战,既有精神上的,如大脑形态改变和认知改变,也有身体上的,如器官不成熟、初乳摄入减少和体重增加。在猪中,新生仔猪的头部形态是识别这种受损仔猪的良好表型标志物。生长迟缓可以被认为是母本的一种特性,部分原因是子宫容量或不足。解决这个问题的一种新方法是将窝内受 IUGR 影响的仔猪比例作为子宫容量的间接衡量标准。然而,子宫容量或充足度不能仅仅等同于胎仔数,因此是一种在农场难以衡量的性状。
共有 21159 头长白猪×大约克夏或长白猪×杜洛克猪的仔猪(出生超过 52 周)记录了头部形态和初生重,并从出生一直跟踪到死亡或断奶。在仔猪水平上,IUGR(根据头部形态定义)的估计遗传力很低,为 0.01±0.01。仔猪出生重的直接遗传效应(h=0.07±0.02)与头部形态呈强烈负相关(-0.93),即受 IUGR 影响的仔猪出生重较低。在母猪水平上,分析窝内受 IUGR 影响的仔猪比例,遗传力为 0.20±0.06,受 IUGR 影响的仔猪比例与窝产仔平均初生重(-0.90)和 24 小时存活仔猪比例(-0.80)之间存在高度负遗传相关。
这表明,窝内受 IUGR 影响的仔猪比例是一种合适的子宫容量间接衡量标准,可以纳入旨在减少仔猪 IUGR 和提高仔猪存活率的繁殖计划。