Abstract :
Osteochondrosis is a growth disorder in the cartilage of young animals and is characterised by lesions found in the cartilage
and bone. This study identified quantitative trait loci (QTLs) associated with six osteochondrosis lesion traits in the elbow joint
of finishing pigs. The traits were: thickening of the cartilage, lesion in the subchondral bone, irregular cartilage surface, fissure
under the cartilage, an irregular sagittal central groove and depression of the proximal edge of the radius. The study comprised
7172 finishing pigs from crossing 12 Duroc boars with 600 crossbred Landrace3Large White sows and included 462 single
nucleotide polymorphism markers. The results showed 18 QTLs exceeding the 5% genome-wide threshold. The QTLs associated
with lesions in the medial part of the condylus humeri (assumed to be the four main osteochondrosis traits) were, in most
cases, at common locations, whereas the QTLs associated with depression of the proximal edge of the radius in general were
on the same chromosomes but at separate locations. The detected QTLs explain a large part of the genetic variation, which is
promising for incorporating osteochondrosis into a breeding programme using marker-assisted selection.
Keywords :
osteochondrosis , QTLS , genetic parameters , pigs