6533b85afe1ef96bd12b8e98
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Genome-wide analysis of Italian sheep diversity reveals a strong geographic pattern and cryptic relationships between breeds
Emiliano LasagnaF. NapolitanoLetizia NicolosoM. OccidenteFabio PillaRoberta CiampoliniElena CianiBianca MoioliAntonello CartaP. ModestoD. KompanDonata MarlettaValentina RiggioMariasilvia D'andreaDonato MatassinoPaolo Ajmone-marsanG. UsaiNicolò Pietro Paolo MacciottaPaola CrepaldiFrancesca Maria Sartisubject
multidimensional scalingOvis ariesGenotypeanalysisIntrogressionContext (language use)BiologyBreedinggenetic diversity; genetic structure; genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms; multidimensional scaling; neighbor network; Ovis aries; oviniPolymorphism Single Nucleotidegenome-widegenome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms; multidimensional scaling; neighbor networksingle nucleotide polymorphismsgenetic diversity; genetic structure; genome-wide; single nucleotide polymorphisms; multidimensional scaling; neighbor network; Ovis ariesGeneticsgenetic structureAnimalsneighbor networkInternational HapMap ProjectGeneticsGenetic diversityGenomeSheepSettore AGR/17 - ZOOTECNICA GENERALE E MIGLIORAMENTO GENETICOgenome-wide single nucleotide polymorphismsGenetic VariationGeneral Medicinegenetic diversitybiology.organism_classificationBreedMouflonPhylogeographyItalyEvolutionary biologyoviniGenetic structureAnimal Science and ZoologyrevealsGenetic isolatedescription
Summary Italy counts several sheep breeds, arisen over centuries as a consequence of ancient and recent genetic and demographic events. To finely reconstruct genetic structure and relationships between Italian sheep, 496 subjects from 19 breeds were typed at 50K single nucleotide polymorphism loci. A subset of foreign breeds from the Sheep HapMap dataset was also included in the analyses. Genetic distances (as visualized either in a network or in a multidimensional scaling analysis of identical by state distances) closely reflected geographic proximity between breeds, with a clear north–south gradient, likely because of high levels of past gene flow and admixture all along the peninsula. Sardinian breeds diverged more from other breeds, a probable consequence of the combined effect of ancient sporadic introgression of feral mouflon and long-lasting genetic isolation from continental sheep populations. The study allowed the detection of previously undocumented episodes of recent introgression (Delle Langhe into the endangered Altamurana breed) as well as signatures of known, or claimed, historical introgression (Merino into Sopravissana and Gentile di Puglia; Bergamasca into Fabrianese, Appenninica and, to a lesser extent, Leccese). Arguments that would question, from a genomic point of view, the current breed classification of Bergamasca and Biellese into two separate breeds are presented. Finally, a role for traditional transhumance practices in shaping the genetic makeup of Alpine sheep breeds is proposed. The study represents the first exhaustive analysis of Italian sheep diversity in an European context, and it bridges the gap in the previous HapMap panel between Western Mediterranean and Swiss breeds.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2014-01-01 |