| Literature DB >> 25621459 |
Huashui Ai1, Xiaodong Fang2, Bin Yang1, Zhiyong Huang2, Hao Chen1, Likai Mao2, Feng Zhang1, Lu Zhang2, Leilei Cui1, Weiming He2, Jie Yang1, Xiaoming Yao2, Lisheng Zhou1, Lijuan Han2, Jing Li1, Silong Sun2, Xianhua Xie1, Boxian Lai2, Ying Su1, Yao Lu2, Hui Yang1, Tao Huang1, Wenjiang Deng1, Rasmus Nielsen3, Jun Ren1, Lusheng Huang1.
Abstract
Domestic pigs have evolved genetic adaptations to their local environmental conditions, such as cold and hot climates. We sequenced the genomes of 69 pigs from 15 geographically divergent locations in China and detected 41 million variants, of which 21 million were absent from the dbSNP database. In a genome-wide scan, we identified a set of loci that likely have a role in regional adaptations to high- and low-latitude environments within China. Intriguingly, we found an exceptionally large (14-Mb) region with a low recombination rate on the X chromosome that appears to have two distinct haplotypes in the high- and low-latitude populations, possibly underlying their adaptation to cold and hot environments, respectively. Surprisingly, the adaptive sweep in the high-latitude regions has acted on DNA that might have been introgressed from an extinct Sus species. Our findings provide new insights into the evolutionary history of pigs and the role of introgression in adaptation.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25621459 DOI: 10.1038/ng.3199
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330