4.5 Article

Evolutionary study of a potential selection target region in the pig

Journal

HEREDITY
Volume 106, Issue 2, Pages 330-338

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/hdy.2010.61

Keywords

pig; quantitative trait locus; demographic history; Bayesian inference

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion (MICINN), Spain
  2. MICINN, Spain [CGL2009-0934]
  3. China National 973 Project [2006CB102100]
  4. [AGL2007-65563-C02-01/GAN]

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Domestication, modern breeding and artificial selection have shaped dramatically the genomic variability of domestic animals. In livestock, the so-called FAT1 quantitative trait locus (QTL) in porcine chromosome 4 was the first QTL uncovered although, to date, its precise molecular nature has remained elusive. Here, we characterize the nucleotide variability of 13 fragments of similar to 500 bp equally spaced in a 2Mb region in the vicinity of the FAT1 region in a wide-diversity panel of 32 pigs. Asian and European animals, including local Mediterranean and international pig breeds, were sequenced. Patterns of genetic variability were very complex and varied largely across loci and populations; they did not reveal overall a clear signal of a selective sweep in any breed, although FABP4 fragment showed a significantly higher diversity. We used an approximate Bayesian computation approach to infer the evolutionary history of this SSC4 region. Notably, we found that European pig populations have a much lower effective size than their Asian counterparts: in the order of hundreds vs hundreds of thousands. We show also an important part of extant European variability is actually due to introgression of Asian germplasm into Europe. This study shows how a potential loss in diversity caused by bottlenecks and possible selective sweeps associated with domestication and artificial selection can be counterbalanced by migration, making it much more difficult the identification of selection footprints based on naive demographic assumptions. Given the small fragment analyzed here, it remains to be studied how these conclusions apply to the rest of the genome. Heredity (2011) 106, 330-338; doi:10.1038/hdy.2010.61; published online 26 May 2010

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