RD16102Epigenetics and developmental programming of welfare and production traits in farm animals
Farm animals have been used extensively as models to study prenatal programming of health and disease but comparatively little attention has been directed towards traits of commercial importance until recently. We review the evidence that prenatal factors such as parental nutrition, gestational stress, exposure to environmental chemicals and advanced breeding technologies, can influence traits such as postnatal growth, feed efficiency, milk yield, carcass composition, animal welfare and reproductive potential; and discuss underlying epigenetic mechanisms of inheritance. We conclude that, although proof of concept is proven for several traits, issues relating to effect-size for complex traits that are polygenic in nature are small, and hence commercial importance remains uncertain. Resolution of these discrepancies will require concerted international efforts that consider multiple concurrent stressors that recapitulate contemporary systems of livestock production.
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