| Literature DB >> 29294071 |
Chugang Mei1, Hongcheng Wang1, Qijun Liao2, Lizhong Wang2, Gong Cheng1, Hongbao Wang1, Chunping Zhao1, Shancen Zhao2, Jiuzhou Song3, Xuanmin Guang2, George E Liu4, Anning Li1, Xueli Wu2, Chongzhi Wang2, Xiaodong Fang2, Xin Zhao1,5, Stephen B Smith6, Wucai Yang1, Wanqiang Tian7, Linsheng Gui1, Yingying Zhang1, Rodney A Hill8, Zhongliang Jiang1, Yaping Xin1, Cunling Jia1, Xiuzhu Sun1, Shuhui Wang1, Huanming Yang9,10, Jian Wang9,10, Wenjuan Zhu2, Linsen Zan1.
Abstract
The bovine genetic resources in China are diverse, but their value and potential are yet to be discovered. To determine the genetic diversity and population structure of Chinese cattle, we analyzed the whole genomes of 46 cattle from six phenotypically and geographically representative Chinese cattle breeds, together with 18 Red Angus cattle genomes, 11 Japanese black cattle genomes and taurine and indicine genomes available from previous studies. Our results showed that Chinese cattle originated from hybridization between Bos taurus and Bos indicus. Moreover, we found that the level of genetic variation in Chinese cattle depends upon the degree of indicine content. We also discovered many potential selective sweep regions associated with domestication related to breed-specific characteristics, with selective sweep regions including genes associated with coat color (ERCC2, MC1R, ZBTB17, and MAP2K1), dairy traits (NCAPG, MAPK7, FST, ITFG1, SETMAR, PAG1, CSN3, and RPL37A), and meat production/quality traits (such as BBS2, R3HDM1, IGFBP2, IGFBP5, MYH9, MYH4, and MC5R). These findings substantially expand the catalogue of genetic variants in cattle and reveal new insights into the evolutionary history and domestication traits of Chinese cattle.Entities:
Keywords: Chinese cattle; admixture; indicine components; selection; whole genome sequencing
Year: 2018 PMID: 29294071 DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msx322
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biol Evol ISSN: 0737-4038 Impact factor: 16.240