DNA
Basics
Strive for Consistency
The future demand for beef as a food product in the 21st Century will depend
on the ability of segment of the beef industry to respond collectively to the
changing needs of our customer, the beef-eating consumer. Modern consumers
demand improved product quality and consistency. Improvements in production,
nutrition, management, processing, as well as handling and cooking techniques
all play an important part in achieving future customer satisfaction.
Consistency, or uniformity in beef production has long been a goal for
cattlemen. Uniformity at the sale barn has meant higher prices, uniformity in
the feedlot relates to a higher percentage of correctly finished cattle and
ultimately a higher price. Lack of consistency of beef was identified as a
major problem in the 1991 Beef Quality Audit conducted by the National
Cattlemen's Beef Association. Although the 2001 audit showed improvement,
commercial cow-calf producers as well as their seedstock suppliers are looking
for selection and management practices that will result in continued
improvement through more consistency and less variation in the cattle they
produce for beef.
Diversity and Variation
There are three types of variation that impact uniformity among cattle
including genetic, phenotypic and environmental. All three have a compounding
effect. Genetic variation in a calf crop relates to the diversity of genotypes
for a particular trait, such as birth weight. Phenotypic variation is the
actual variation that the calf expresses, or shows like eye color, or amount
of body fat. Environmental variation (or how that calf is managed) impacts the
ability for that animal to express it's genetic potential.
The opportunity for genetic change in any population is dependent on the
genetic diversity, which exists in that population. There is no more powerful
technology for making genetic progress than selecting the best animals in the
population and making them parents. Some genetically inherited traits in
cattle are more important to producers than others because cattle that have
those traits are more in demand. The continued application of breeding
technologies will contribute significantly to maintaining gains made and
achieving continued improvements in production efficiency, as well as quality
and consistency.
Role of DNA Analysis
DNA is the substance of which most genes are made and is chiefly responsible
for the transmission of inherited characteristics. Every animal has a unique
genetic makeup or DNA profile. DNA testing or "fingerprinting"
provides a method for determining with high accuracy the parentage of cattle
based upon this profile. DNA, or Deoxyribonucleic acid, is found in the nuclei
of all living cells, which make up Chromosomes. A Chromosome is made up of DNA
molecules tightly coiled around proteins.
Making genetic progress is not as simple in commercial beef production
settings. Although some operators are able to identify the dam side of the
parentage equation, more often than not multi-sire matings confuse the issue
for identifying the sire. Exact identification of parentage of calves
resulting from unknown matings or from a multi-sire pasture matings is a
challenge, but technology offers the tools to resolve this problem. DNA
testing or "fingerprinting" provides a method for determining with
high accuracy the parentage of cattle. The characteristics of all living
things, including cattle are determined by information contained within the
DNA inherited from their parents. DNA directs how the cells develop and
controls the way characteristics are passed on from parent to progeny.
DNA Parentage Verification
Parentage testing is basically achieved by detecting certain
"markers". Any attribute that can be easily detected and its
inheritance traced can serve as a marker. Parentage and paternity testing
relies on two basic principles:
1. On the detection of genetically inherited markers that remain the same
throughout the animal's life, and
2. On the knowledge that all animals possess two copies of every gene (or
marker), one of which was inherited from the sire and the other from the
dam.
If the marker shows variation, then the copy inherited from the dam may be
different to that inherited from the sire. This provides the foundation for
parentage and paternity testing. That is, if one variant of a genetic marker
is present in a calf but absent in both alleged parents, the calf must be
excluded as the offspring of that mating.
Parentage and paternity tests always work by exclusion since no test can with
100% accuracy positively identify an animal's parentage. That is, testing can
exclude a sire or dam as a possible parent or an offspring can be excluded as
being possible from a nominated mating or parent and these exclusions are
absolute, however, if an animal or mating qualifies, this does not prove it
absolutely. At best we can provide a probability that the qualification is
correct, but this will never be 100%.
How it is done?
The process of DNA fingerprinting requires DNA to be extracted from a tissue
sample. Blood, semen, muscle and hair follicles are all examples of tissue
that can be used to extract DNA. All tissue samples need to be relatively
fresh in order to extract DNA of sufficient quality for testing.
A commercially viable DNA-based parentage or paternity test requires the
identification of groups of markers (three or four markers per group) that can
be tested simultaneously and that show a high degree of variability across
different cattle breeds. Currently a standard set of 12 DNA markers tested in
three separate marker groups is used for DNA fingerprinting.
Extra groups of markers are available if further resolution is required. The
combined results of all markers produce a DNA profile for each animal and the
chances of any two animals having the same profile lies somewhere between
three in 10 million to three in 100 billion, depending on the breed.
Applications for the beef industry
For commercial breeders Cow Sense Genetic Services offers a powerful tool for
collecting parentage information on their animals for enhanced management
decision making capabilities. The identification of those sires and dams
producing progeny with desirable or even undesirable traits can assist in
making management decisions with regard to bull selection, replacement heifer
selection and or culling decisions. The ability to sample many and actually
test only those that are outliers provides additional economy.
For the seedstock producers, DNA typing offered by Cow Sense Genetic Services
provides greater accuracy than blood typing although the costs of the two
procedures are similar. As the DNA parentage verification process is more
exact (each animal has a unique genetic profile), there is less chance for
error. The DNA parentage identification process allows for cost effective
means of pedigree verification for breed associations. In addition testing of
young sires can be accelerated by multi sire matings, while maintaining the
ability to verify parentage. In the future identification of markers for
traits of economic importance will also help in the selection of superior
animals.
For processors and harvest industry Cow Sense Genetic Services provides the
tools to verify that the "in house" animal - to - product tracking
systems are accurate. In addition broader application can be implemented to
provide traceability of product to carcass and true source verification for
their customers.