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Dive into the research topics where Aurélia Baur is active.

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Featured researches published by Aurélia Baur.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Detection of haplotypes associated with prenatal death in dairy cattle and identification of deleterious mutations in GART, SHBG and SLC37A2.

Sébastien Fritz; Aurélien Capitan; Anis Djari; Sabrina Rodriguez; A. Barbat; Aurélia Baur; Cécile Grohs; Bernard Weiss; Mekki Boussaha; Diane Esquerre; Christophe Klopp; Dominique Rocha; Didier Boichard

The regular decrease of female fertility over time is a major concern in modern dairy cattle industry. Only half of this decrease is explained by indirect response to selection on milk production, suggesting the existence of other factors such as embryonic lethal genetic defects. Genomic regions harboring recessive deleterious mutations were detected in three dairy cattle breeds by identifying frequent haplotypes (>1%) showing a deficit in homozygotes among Illumina Bovine 50k Beadchip haplotyping data from the French genomic selection database (47,878 Holstein, 16,833 Montbéliarde, and 11,466 Normande animals). Thirty-four candidate haplotypes (p<10−4) including previously reported regions associated with Brachyspina, CVM, HH1, and HH3 in Holstein breed were identified. Haplotype length varied from 1 to 4.8 Mb and frequencies from 1.7 up to 9%. A significant negative effect on calving rate, consistent in heifers and in lactating cows, was observed for 9 of these haplotypes in matings between carrier bulls and daughters of carrier sires, confirming their association with embryonic lethal mutations. Eight regions were further investigated using whole genome sequencing data from heterozygous bull carriers and control animals (45 animals in total). Six strong candidate causative mutations including polymorphisms previously reported in FANCI (Brachyspina), SLC35A3 (CVM), APAF1 (HH1) and three novel mutations with very damaging effect on the protein structure, according to SIFT and Polyphen-2, were detected in GART, SHBG and SLC37A2 genes. In conclusion, this study reveals a yet hidden consequence of the important inbreeding rate observed in intensively selected and specialized cattle breeds. Counter-selection of these mutations and management of matings will have positive consequences on female fertility in dairy cattle.


Animal Production Science | 2012

Genomic selection in French dairy cattle

Didier Boichard; François Guillaume; Aurélia Baur; Pascal Croiseau; Marie-Noëlle Rossignol; Marie Yvonne Boscher; Tom Druet; Lucie Genestout; J. J. Colleau; L. Journaux; Vincent Ducrocq; Sébastien Fritz

Genomic selection is implemented in French Holstein, Montbeliarde, and Normande breeds (70%, 16% and 12% of French dairy cows). A characteristic of the model for genomic evaluation is the use of haplotypes instead of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), so as to maximise linkage disequilibrium between markers and quantitative


PLOS ONE | 2013

Novel Insights into the Bovine Polled Phenotype and Horn Ontogenesis in Bovidae

Aurélie Allais-Bonnet; Cécile Grohs; Ivica Medugorac; Stefan Krebs; Anis Djari; Alexander Graf; Sébastien Fritz; Doris Seichter; Aurélia Baur; Ingolf Russ; Stephan Bouet; Sophie Rothammer; Per Wahlberg; Diane Esquerre; Chris Hoze; Mekki Boussaha; Bernard Weiss; Dominique Thepot; Marie-Noëlle Fouilloux; Marie-Noëlle Rossignol; Este Van Marle-Koster; Gunnfríður Elín Hreiðarsdóttir; Sarah Barbey; Dominique Dozias; Emilie Cobo; Patrick Reversé; Olivier Catros; Jean-Luc Marchand; Pascal Soulas; Pierre Roy

Despite massive research efforts, the molecular etiology of bovine polledness and the developmental pathways involved in horn ontogenesis are still poorly understood. In a recent article, we provided evidence for the existence of at least two different alleles at the Polled locus and identified candidate mutations for each of them. None of these mutations was located in known coding or regulatory regions, thus adding to the complexity of understanding the molecular basis of polledness. We confirm previous results here and exhaustively identify the causative mutation for the Celtic allele (PC) and four candidate mutations for the Friesian allele (PF). We describe a previously unreported eyelash-and-eyelid phenotype associated with regular polledness, and present unique histological and gene expression data on bovine horn bud differentiation in fetuses affected by three different horn defect syndromes, as well as in wild-type controls. We propose the ectopic expression of a lincRNA in PC/p horn buds as a probable cause of horn bud agenesis. In addition, we provide evidence for an involvement of OLIG2, FOXL2 and RXFP2 in horn bud differentiation, and draw a first link between bovine, ovine and caprine Polled loci. Our results represent a first and important step in understanding the genetic pathways and key process involved in horn bud differentiation in Bovidae.


Genetics Selection Evolution | 2012

Inclusion of cow records in genomic evaluations and impact on bias due to preferential treatment

Romain Dassonneville; Aurélia Baur; Sébastien Fritz; Didier Boichard; Vincent Ducrocq

BackgroundToday, genomic evaluations are an essential feature of dairy cattle breeding. Initially, genomic evaluation targeted young bulls but recently, a rapidly increasing number of females (both heifers and cows) are being genotyped. A rising issue is whether and how own performance of genotyped cows should be included in genomic evaluations. The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of including yield deviations, i.e. own performance of cows, in genomic evaluations.MethodsTwo different genomic evaluations were performed: one including only reliable daughter yield deviations of proven bulls based on their non-genotyped daughters, and one including both daughter yield deviations for males and own yield deviations for genotyped females. Milk yield, the trait most prone to preferential treatment, and somatic cell count, for which such a bias is very unlikely, were studied. Data consisted of two groups of animals from the three main dairy breeds in France: 11 884 elite females genotyped by breeding companies and 7032 cows genotyped for a research project (and considered as randomly selected from the commercial population).ResultsFor several measures that could be related to preferential treatment bias, the elite group presented a different pattern of estimated breeding values for milk yield compared to the other combinations of trait and group: for instance, for milk yield, the average difference between estimated breeding values with or without own yield deviations was significantly different from 0 for this group. Correlations between estimated breeding values with or without yield deviations were lower for elite females than for randomly selected cows for milk yield but were very similar for somatic cell count.ConclusionsThis study demonstrated that including own milk performance of elite females leads to biased (over-estimated) genomic evaluations. Thus, milk production records of elite cows require specific treatment in genomic evaluation.


Reproduction, Fertility and Development | 2015

Genetic tools to improve reproduction traits in dairy cattle.

Aurélien Capitan; Pauline Michot; Aurélia Baur; Romain Saintilan; Chris Hoze; Damien Valour; François Guillaume; D Boichon; A. Barbat; Didier Boichard; Laurent Schibler; Sébastien Fritz

Fertility is a major concern in the dairy cattle industry and has been the subject of numerous studies over the past 20 years. Surprisingly, most of these studies focused on rough female phenotypes and, despite their important role in reproductive success, male- and embryo-related traits have been poorly investigated. In recent years, the rapid and important evolution of technologies in genetic research has led to the development of genomic selection. The generalisation of this method in combination with the achievements of the AI industry have led to the constitution of large databases of genotyping and sequencing data, as well as refined phenotypes and pedigree records. These resources offer unprecedented opportunities in terms of fundamental and applied research. Here we present five such examples with a focus on reproduction-related traits: (1) detection of quantitative trait loci (QTL) for male fertility and semen quality traits; (2) detection of QTL for refined phenotypes associated with female fertility; (3) identification of recessive embryonic lethal mutations by depletion of homozygous haplotypes; (4) identification of recessive embryonic lethal mutations by mining whole-genome sequencing data; and (5) the contribution of high-density single nucleotide polymorphism chips, whole-genome sequencing and imputation to increasing the power of QTL detection methods and to the identification of causal variants.


Genetics Research | 2011

Fine tuning genomic evaluations in dairy cattle through SNP pre-selection with the Elastic-Net algorithm

Pascal Croiseau; A. Legarra; François Guillaume; Sébastien Fritz; Aurélia Baur; Carine Colombani; Christèle Robert-Granié; Didier Boichard; Vincent Ducrocq


16èmes Rencontres Recherches Ruminants | 2009

Simulation des potentialités de la sélection génomique chez les bovins laitiers.

J Jacques Colleau; Sébastien Fritz; François Guillaume; Aurélia Baur; D. Dupassieux; Marie Yvonne Boscher; L. Journaux; A. Eggen; Didier Boichard


Proceedings of the World Congress on Genetics Applied to Livestock Production | 2010

Improving genomic evaluation strategies in dairy cattle through SNP pre-selection

Pascal Croiseau; Carine Colombani; Andres Legarra Albizu; François Guillaume; Sébastien Fritz; Aurélia Baur; Romain Dassonneville; Clotilde Patry; Christèle Robert-Granié; Vincent Ducrocq


Proceedings of the World Congress on Genetics Applied to Livestock Production | 2010

Genomic Selection in French dairy Cattle

Didier Boichard; François Guillaume; Aurélia Baur; Pascal Croiseau; Marie-Noëlle Rossignol; Marie-Yvonne Boscher; Tom Druet; Lucie Genestout; A. Eggen; L. Journaux; Vincent Ducrocq; Sébastien Fritz


62. Annual Meeting of the European Federation of Animal Science (EAAP) | 2011

Description of the French genomic evaluation approach

Pascal Croiseau; Chris Hoze; Sébastien Fritz; François Guillaume; Carine Colombani; Andres Legarra Albizu; Aurélia Baur; Christèle Robert-Granié; Didier Boichard; Vincent Ducrocq

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Sébastien Fritz

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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François Guillaume

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Vincent Ducrocq

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Pascal Croiseau

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Anis Djari

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Aurélien Capitan

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Cécile Grohs

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Diane Esquerre

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Mekki Boussaha

Université Paris-Saclay

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