Abstract
The use of the sex-determining region Y gene in terminal sire beef cattle breeding was investigated, assuming that fertile transgenic bulls carrying this gene on an autosome can be created. The benefit of these transgenic bulls arises from having an increased proportion of calves with a male phenotype. Two mating strategies utilising the transgenic bulls were devised and compared; the Quota scheme whereby a quota of normal bulls is used alongside the transgenic bulls in a breeding nucleus, and the Bonus scheme in which a phenotypic bonus is assigned to transgenic bulls indicating the added value of their offspring. Bonus and Quota breeding schemes were comparable, in terms of the value of offspring of the bulls, for the first 6 years of selection, after which time the Quota breeding scheme was superior. For time horizons less than 10 years, and large assumed phenotypic superiorities of male calves, breeding schemes with transgenic bulls were superior to traditional breeding schemes without transgenic bulls. If the time horizon was longer, or if the assumed superiority of male calves was small, then traditional breeding schemes were generally superior to those utilising transgenic bulls. Scenarios were observed, however, where transgenic bulls were always superior to normal bulls, in terms of their value as sires. Equations were derived to predict genetic gain and the equilibrium genetic lag between normal and transgenic bulls in Quota breeding schemes.
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Bishop SC, Woolliams JA (1991). Utilization of the sex-determining region Y gene in beef cattle breeding schemes. Anim Prod 53:157–164
Koopman P, Gubbay J, Vivian N, Goodfellow PN, Lovell-Badge R (1991). Male development of chromosomally female mice transgenic for SRY. Nature 351:117–121
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Communicated by E. J. Eisen
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Bishop, S.C. A comparison of Bonus and Quota mating systems for utilising the sex-determining region Y gene in terminal sire beef cattle breeding. Theoret. Appl. Genetics 90, 487–491 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00221994
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00221994