“…The α-S1-casein strong variants produced around 3.6 g/L per allele, medium variants produced 1.1–1.6 g/L per allele, weak variants produced 0.45–0.6 g/L per allele, and null variants resulted in absence of the α-S1-casein in milk ( Grosclaude et al, 1987 ; Grosclaude and Martin, 1997 ; Martin et al, 1999 ). Strong variants with high content of α-S1-casein are most desired in dairy production since they are associated with lower pH values, better coagulation properties, faster curdling rate and greater gel firmness, which contribute largely to high yield and quality of cheese, even if the rennet coagulation time was longer ( Ambrosoli et al, 1988 ; Pirisi et al, 1994 ; Clark and Sherbon, 2000 ; Schmidely et al, 2002 ; Zullo et al, 2005 ; Caravaca et al, 2011 ; Devold et al, 2011 ; Cebo et al, 2012 ; Vacca et al, 2014 ; Johansson et al, 2015 ; Marković et al, 2018 ). Since the casein content in milk also affects the size of casein micelles and the amount and composition of milk fatty acids, cheese made from milk with strong α-S1-variants has a better structure and taste with less typical goat flavor than cheese produced from intermediate or weak variants ( Delacroix Buchet et al, 1996 ).…”