학술논문

A genome-wide scan for signatures of directional selection in domesticated pigs
Document Type
article
Source
BMC Genomics. 16(1)
Subject
Human Genome
Genetics
Biotechnology
Animals
Animals
Domestic
Breeding
Chromosome Mapping
Genome
Haplotypes
Metabolomics
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Receptors
Metabotropic Glutamate
Reproduction
Selection
Genetic
Sequence Analysis
DNA
Sus scrofa
Swine
Pig
Domestication
Selective sweep
Directional selection
Quantitative traits
Biological Sciences
Information and Computing Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Bioinformatics
Language
Abstract
BackgroundAnimal domestication involved drastic phenotypic changes driven by strong artificial selection and also resulted in new populations of breeds, established by humans. This study aims to identify genes that show evidence of recent artificial selection during pig domestication.ResultsWhole-genome resequencing of 30 individual pigs from domesticated breeds, Landrace and Yorkshire, and 10 Asian wild boars at ~16-fold coverage was performed resulting in over 4.3 million SNPs for 19,990 genes. We constructed a comprehensive genome map of directional selection by detecting selective sweeps using an F ST-based approach that detects directional selection in lineages leading to the domesticated breeds and using a haplotype-based test that detects ongoing selective sweeps within the breeds. We show that candidate genes under selection are significantly enriched for loci implicated in quantitative traits important to pig reproduction and production. The candidate gene with the strongest signals of directional selection belongs to group III of the metabolomics glutamate receptors, known to affect brain functions associated with eating behavior, suggesting that loci under strong selection include loci involved in behaviorial traits in domesticated pigs including tameness.ConclusionsWe show that a significant proportion of selection signatures coincide with loci that were previously inferred to affect phenotypic variation in pigs. We further identify functional enrichment related to behavior, such as signal transduction and neuronal activities, for those targets of selection during domestication in pigs.