| Literature DB >> 28651519 |
Adeniyi C Adeola1,2, Olufunke O Oluwole3, Bukola M Oladele3, Temilola O Olorungbounmi3, Bamidele Boladuro3, Sunday C Olaogun4, Lotanna M Nneji1,2,5, Oscar J Sanke6, Philip M Dawuda7, Ofelia G Omitogun8, Laurent Frantz9,10, Robert W Murphy1,11, Hai-Bing Xie1,2, Min-Sheng Peng12,13,14, Ya-Ping Zhang15,16,17,18.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The history of pig populations in Africa remains controversial due to insufficient evidence from archaeological and genetic data. Previously, a Western ancestry for West African pigs was reported based on loci that are involved in the determination of coat color. We investigated the genetic diversity of Nigerian indigenous pigs (NIP) by simultaneously analyzing variation in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), Y-chromosome sequence and the melanocortin receptor 1 (MC1R) gene.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28651519 PMCID: PMC5485568 DOI: 10.1186/s12711-017-0326-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Sel Evol ISSN: 0999-193X Impact factor: 4.297
Fig. 1Median-joining network of 923 D-loop sequences corresponding to Nigerian indigenous pigs, the global population of pig and the wild boar population. NIP cluster with European and East/Southeast Asian pigs. Colors indicate locations: yellow indigenous pigs from Nigeria; blue United Kingdom; orange America; brown Iberia (Portugal + Spain); black East Africa (Uganda + Kenya + Zimbabwe); grey Indonesian pigs; red North Africa (Moroccan + Tunisian) wild boars; lime East Asian and mainland Southeast Asian (Japan, Korea, Vietnam, Thailand) pigs and wild boars; purple other European countries (Germany, Luxemburg, Belgium, Italy, Austria, France, Hungry); and light blue Indian pigs. Note: red diamonds denote intermediate haplotypes
Fig. 2Median joining network of MC1R haplotypes in Nigerian, Polynesian, Asian and European pigs. All known haplotypes are represented by circles. Colors inside the circles indicate the type and nomenclature as follows [13, 14]: brown (E+ European and Asian—wild type); yellow Nigerian indigenous pigs (NIP); red (e—recessive red—European); black and white (EP—spotted black—European); and black (ED2 and ED1—dominant black—European, Polynesian and Asian). Differences in sequences are noted on each of the branches and the small dash lines represent the number of steps. Red ticks perpendicular to each branch represent non-synonymous mutations that change the protein sequence. Note: red diamond symbols represent intermediate haplotypes