| Literature DB >> 29170508 |
Oriol Vidal1, Cord Drögemüller2, Gabriela Obexer-Ruff2, Irene Reber2, Jordi Jordana3, Amparo Martínez4, Valentin Adrian Bâlteanu5, Juan Vicente Delgado4, Shahin Eghbalsaied6, Vincenzo Landi4, Felix Goyache7, Amadou Traoré8, Michele Pazzola9, Giuseppe Massimo Vacca9, Bouabid Badaoui10, Fabio Pilla11, Mariasilvia D'Andrea11, Isabel Álvarez7, Juan Capote12, Abdoallah Sharaf13,14,15, Àgueda Pons16, Marcel Amills3,15.
Abstract
The analysis of Y-chromosome variation has provided valuable clues about the paternal history of domestic animal populations. The main goal of the current work was to characterize Y-chromosome diversity in 31 goat populations from Central Eastern (Switzerland and Romania) and Southern Europe (Spain and Italy) as well as in reference populations from Africa and the Near East. Towards this end, we have genotyped seven single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), mapping to the SRY, ZFY, AMELY and DDX3Y Y-linked loci, in 275 bucks from 31 populations. We have observed a low level of variability in the goat Y-chromosome, with just five haplotypes segregating in the whole set of populations. We have also found that Swiss bucks carry exclusively Y1 haplotypes (Y1A: 24%, Y1B1: 15%, Y1B2: 43% and Y1C: 18%), while in Italian and Spanish bucks Y2A is the most abundant haplotype (77%). Interestingly, in Carpathian goats from Romania the Y2A haplotype is also frequent (42%). The high Y-chromosome differentiation between Swiss and Italian/Spanish breeds might be due to the post-domestication spread of two different Near Eastern genetic stocks through the Danubian and Mediterranean corridors. Historical gene flow between Southern European and Northern African goats might have also contributed to generate such pattern of genetic differentiation.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29170508 PMCID: PMC5701018 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-15593-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Distribution of Y-chromosome haplotypes in 31 goat populations.
| Area | BREED | Country | Y1A | Y1B1 | Y1B2 | Y1C | Y2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Central and East Europe | Alpine | Switzerland | 8 | 2 | |||
| Appenzell | 8 | ||||||
| Camosciata delle Alpi | 1 | ||||||
| Chamois Coloured goat | 5 | ||||||
| Grisons Striped | 9 | ||||||
| Peacock Goat | 9 | ||||||
| Saanen | 3 | 15 | |||||
| St Gallen Booted goat | 9 | ||||||
| Toggenburg | 8 | ||||||
| Valais Blackneck | 9 | ||||||
| Verzasca goat | 8 | ||||||
| Carpathian | Romania | 10 | 1 | 8 | |||
| TOTAL (N = 113) | 33 | 14 | 41 | 17 | 8 | ||
| Southern Europe | Bermeya | Spain | 9 | ||||
| Blanca Andaluza | 1 | 1 | |||||
| Guadarrama | 10 | ||||||
| Malagueña | 4 | ||||||
| Murciano Granadina | 23 | ||||||
| Mallorquina | 10 | ||||||
| Pitiüsa | 15 | ||||||
| Blanca de Rasquera | 5 | ||||||
| Garganica | Italy | 1 | 1 | 1 | |||
| Sarda | 16 | 1 | 5 | ||||
| Maltese | 3 | ||||||
| TOTAL (N = 106) | 20 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 82 | ||
| Africa | Djallonke | Burkina Faso | 5 | ||||
| Sahel | 9 | ||||||
| African Dwarf Goat | Nigeria | 2 | |||||
| Nigerian | 2 | ||||||
| Zaraibi | Egypt | 15 | |||||
| TOTAL (N = 33) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 33 | ||
| Near East | Lori-Bakhtyari Goat | Iran | 8 | 2 | |||
| Esfahan Goat | 12 | ||||||
| Oman | Oman | 1 | |||||
| TOTAL (N = 23) | 20 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 | ||
Y-chromosome polymorphisms and haplotypes analyzed in the current work.
| SRY 2971 | SRY 3098 | SRY 1876 | AMELY 42 | ZFY 527 | ZFY 46 | DDX3Y 56 | Haplotype |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T | G | A | C | A | C | G | Y1A |
| A | G | A | C | A | C | G | Y1B1 |
| A | G | A | C | A | T | G | Y1B2 |
| A | G | C | C | A | C | G | Y1C |
| T | A | A | C | G | C | C | Y2 |
Caprine Y-chromosome diversity in four geographic areas.
| Geographic areas | Number of haplotypes | Haplotype diversity | Sample size |
|---|---|---|---|
| Central and East Europe | 5 | 0.747 | 113 |
| Southern Europe | 5 | 0.369 | 106 |
| Near East | 2 | 0.273 | 23 |
| Africa | 1 | 0.000 | 33 |
| TOTAL | 5 | 0.690 | 275 |
Figure 1Median joining network based on the Y-chromosome genotypes of 275 goats from Southern European (Bermeya, Blanca Andaluza, Garganica, Guadarrama, Malagueña, Maltese, Murciano Granadina, Mallorquina, Pitiüsa, Blanca de Rasquera and Sarda breeds), Central and East European (Alpine, Appenzell, Camosciata delle Alpi, Chamois Coloured, Grisons Striped, Peacock Goat, Carpathian, Saanen, St Gallen Booted goat, Toggenburg, Valais Blackneck and Verzasca breeds), African (Djallonke, African Dwarf, Nigeria, Sahel and Zaraibi breeds) and Near Eastern (Iran and Oman) countries.