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Genetic parameters for rennet- and acid-induced coagulation properties in milk from Swedish Red dairy cows.

Gustavsson, Frida LU ; Glantz, Maria LU ; Poulsen, N A ; Wadsö, Lars LU ; Stålhammar, H ; Andrén, A ; Månsson, H Lindmark ; Larsen, L B ; Paulsson, M and Fikse, W F (2014) In Journal of Dairy Science 97(8). p.5219-5229
Abstract
Milk coagulation is an important processing trait, being the basis for production of both cheese and fermented products. There is interest in including technological properties of these products in the breeding goal for dairy cattle. The aim of the present study was therefore to estimate genetic parameters for milk coagulation properties, including both rennet- and acid-induced coagulation, in Swedish Red dairy cattle using genomic relationships. Morning milk samples and blood samples were collected from 395 Swedish Red cows that were selected to be as genetically unrelated as possible. Using a rheometer, milk samples were analyzed for rennet- and acid-induced coagulation properties, including gel strength (G'), coagulation time, and yield... (More)
Milk coagulation is an important processing trait, being the basis for production of both cheese and fermented products. There is interest in including technological properties of these products in the breeding goal for dairy cattle. The aim of the present study was therefore to estimate genetic parameters for milk coagulation properties, including both rennet- and acid-induced coagulation, in Swedish Red dairy cattle using genomic relationships. Morning milk samples and blood samples were collected from 395 Swedish Red cows that were selected to be as genetically unrelated as possible. Using a rheometer, milk samples were analyzed for rennet- and acid-induced coagulation properties, including gel strength (G'), coagulation time, and yield stress (YS). In addition to the technological traits, milk composition was analyzed. A binary trait was created to reflect that milk samples that had not coagulated 40 min after rennet addition were considered noncoagulating milk. The cows were genotyped by using the Illumina BovineHD BeadChip (Illumina Inc., San Diego, CA). Almost 600,000 markers remained after quality control and were used to construct a matrix of genomic relationships among the cows. Multivariate models including fixed effects of herd, lactation stage, and parity were fitted using the ASReml software to obtain estimates of heritabilities and genetic and phenotypic correlations. Heritability estimates (h(2)) for G' and YS in rennet and acid gels were found to be high (h(2) = 0.38-0.62) and the genetic correlations between rennet-induced and acid-induced coagulation properties were weak but favorable, with the exception of YSrennet with G'acid and YSacid, both of which were strong. The high heritability (h(2) = 0.45) for milk coagulating ability expressed as a binary trait suggests that noncoagulation could be eliminated through breeding. Additionally, the results indicated that the current breeding objective could increase the frequency of noncoagulating milk and lead to deterioration of acid-induced coagulation through unfavorable genetic associations with protein content (0.38) and milk yield (-0.61 to -0.71), respectively. The outcome of this study suggests that by including more detailed compositional traits genetically associated with milk coagulation or by including milk coagulation properties directly within the breeding goal, it appears possible to breed cows that produce milk better suited for production of cheese and fermented products. (Less)
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author
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Journal of Dairy Science
volume
97
issue
8
pages
5219 - 5229
publisher
American Dairy Science Association
external identifiers
  • wos:000338913300051
  • pmid:24913648
  • scopus:84904416334
  • pmid:24913648
ISSN
1525-3198
DOI
10.3168/jds.2014-7996
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
691fbfe0-eeec-405c-8724-891e0e7180d3 (old id 4528972)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 10:52:01
date last changed
2023-08-31 13:19:51
@article{691fbfe0-eeec-405c-8724-891e0e7180d3,
  abstract     = {{Milk coagulation is an important processing trait, being the basis for production of both cheese and fermented products. There is interest in including technological properties of these products in the breeding goal for dairy cattle. The aim of the present study was therefore to estimate genetic parameters for milk coagulation properties, including both rennet- and acid-induced coagulation, in Swedish Red dairy cattle using genomic relationships. Morning milk samples and blood samples were collected from 395 Swedish Red cows that were selected to be as genetically unrelated as possible. Using a rheometer, milk samples were analyzed for rennet- and acid-induced coagulation properties, including gel strength (G'), coagulation time, and yield stress (YS). In addition to the technological traits, milk composition was analyzed. A binary trait was created to reflect that milk samples that had not coagulated 40 min after rennet addition were considered noncoagulating milk. The cows were genotyped by using the Illumina BovineHD BeadChip (Illumina Inc., San Diego, CA). Almost 600,000 markers remained after quality control and were used to construct a matrix of genomic relationships among the cows. Multivariate models including fixed effects of herd, lactation stage, and parity were fitted using the ASReml software to obtain estimates of heritabilities and genetic and phenotypic correlations. Heritability estimates (h(2)) for G' and YS in rennet and acid gels were found to be high (h(2) = 0.38-0.62) and the genetic correlations between rennet-induced and acid-induced coagulation properties were weak but favorable, with the exception of YSrennet with G'acid and YSacid, both of which were strong. The high heritability (h(2) = 0.45) for milk coagulating ability expressed as a binary trait suggests that noncoagulation could be eliminated through breeding. Additionally, the results indicated that the current breeding objective could increase the frequency of noncoagulating milk and lead to deterioration of acid-induced coagulation through unfavorable genetic associations with protein content (0.38) and milk yield (-0.61 to -0.71), respectively. The outcome of this study suggests that by including more detailed compositional traits genetically associated with milk coagulation or by including milk coagulation properties directly within the breeding goal, it appears possible to breed cows that produce milk better suited for production of cheese and fermented products.}},
  author       = {{Gustavsson, Frida and Glantz, Maria and Poulsen, N A and Wadsö, Lars and Stålhammar, H and Andrén, A and Månsson, H Lindmark and Larsen, L B and Paulsson, M and Fikse, W F}},
  issn         = {{1525-3198}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{8}},
  pages        = {{5219--5229}},
  publisher    = {{American Dairy Science Association}},
  series       = {{Journal of Dairy Science}},
  title        = {{Genetic parameters for rennet- and acid-induced coagulation properties in milk from Swedish Red dairy cows.}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3168/jds.2014-7996}},
  doi          = {{10.3168/jds.2014-7996}},
  volume       = {{97}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}