4.5 Article

Detection of selection signatures for agonistic behaviour in cattle

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL BREEDING AND GENETICS
Volume 135, Issue 3, Pages 170-177

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jbg.12325

Keywords

aggressive behaviour; Lidia breed; selective sweep; Spanish cattle

Funding

  1. CONACYT
  2. CONARGEN from the Mexican government
  3. Genetics Laboratory of the Animal Production Department at the Universidad Complutense of Madrid

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The identification of genomic regions including signatures of selection produced by domestication and its subsequent artificial selection processes allows the understanding of the evolution of bovine breeds. Although several studies describe the genomic variability among meat or milk production cattle breeds, there are limited studies orientated towards bovine behavioural features. This study is focused on mapping genomic signatures of selection which may provide insights of differentiation between neutral and selected polymorphisms. Their effects are studied in the Lidia cattle traditionally selected for agonistic behaviour compared with Spanish breeds showing tamed behaviour. Two different approaches, BayeScan and SelEstim, were applied using genotypic 50K SNP BeadChip data. Both procedures detected two genomic regions bearing genes previously related to behavioural traits. The frequencies of the selected allele in these two regions in Lidia breed were opposite to those found in the tamed breeds. In these genomic regions, several putative genes associated with enriched metabolic pathways related to the behavioural development were identified, as neurochondrin gene (NCDN) or glutamate ionotropic receptor kainate type subunit 3 (GRIK3) both located at BTA3 or leucine-rich repeat and Ig domain containing 2 (LINGO2) and phospholipase A2-activating protein (PLAA) at BTA8.

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