Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation

Animals, Agriculture & Food
Animals Agriculture Food
Genetic Markers for Bull Fertility
WARF: P120282US02

Inventors: Hasan Khatib

The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF) is seeking commercial partners interested in developing genetic markers associated with improved male fertility in cattle.
Overview
The decline in reproductive performance in cattle over the last four decades has been ascribed primarily to fertilization failure and early embryonic loss. Although the genetic makeups of both parents are crucial to reproductive success, most fertility studies in cattle have focused on the maternal role. The paternal contribution has not thoroughly been investigated.

A UW–Madison researcher previously identified single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in several genes associated with cow fertility, milk production and embryo viability. Identification of SNPs associated with reproduction traits in bulls clearly is needed.
The Invention
The UW–Madison researcher now has identified several SNPs associated with improved bull fertility, as measured by sire conception rate. These SNPs are found in three spermatogenesis genes, MAP1B, PPP1R11 and DDX4. These genes are highly conserved from flies to humans but were not known to affect reproduction in cattle.
Applications
  • Genetic markers for bull fertility
Key Benefits
  • Useful as a breeding tool in enabling selection decisions to be made earlier than in traditional breeding programs, thereby shortening the generation interval for cattle breeding
  • First bovine SNPs associated with positive reproductive traits in bulls
  • DNA markers are easy to measure, unambiguous and co-dominant.
Stage of Development
The researcher has tested more than 2,000 bulls to validate the correlation between the three SNPs and a positive sire conception rate.
Additional Information
For More Information About the Inventors
For current licensing status, please contact Emily Bauer at [javascript protected email address] or 608-960-9842

WARF