Abstract
Genetic marker and phenotypic data for a quantitative trait were simulated on 20 paternal half-sib families with 100 progeny to investigate properties of within-family-regression interval mapping of a postulated single quantitative trait locus (QTL) in a marker interval under the infinitesimal genetic model, which has been the basis of the application of quantitative genetics to genetic improvement programs, and to investigate use of the infinitesimal model as null hypothesis in testing for presence of a major QTL. Genetic effects on the marked chromosome were generated based on a major gene model, which simulated a central biallelic QTL, or based on 101 biallelic QTL of equal effect, which approximated the infinitesimal model. The marked chromosome contained 0, 3.3%, 13.3%, or 33.3% of genetic variance and heritability was 0.25 or 0.70. Under the polygenic model with 3.3% of genetic variance on the marked chromosome, which corresponds to the infinitesimal model for the bovine, significant QTL effects were found for individual families. Correlations between estimates of QTL effects and true chromosome substitution effects were 0.29 and 0.47 for heritabilities of 0.25 and 0.70 but up to 0.85 with 33.3% of polygenic variance on the marked chromosome. These results illustrate the potential of marker-assisted selection even under the infinitesimal genetic model. Power of tests for presence of QTL was substantially reduced when the polygenic model with 3.3% of genetic variance on the chromosome was used as a null hypothesis. The ability to determine whether genetic variance on a chromosome was contributed by a single QTL of major effect or a large number of QTL with minor effects, corresponding to the infinitesimal model, was limited.
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