4.5 Article

Porcine colonization of the Americas: a 60k SNP story

Journal

HEREDITY
Volume 110, Issue 4, Pages 321-330

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/hdy.2012.109

Keywords

pig; adaptation; Americas; phylogeography; altitude; selection

Funding

  1. Office of Research, College of ACES
  2. COLCIENCIAS (Francisco Jose de Caldas fellowship, Colombia) [497/2009]
  3. CAPES (Brazil)
  4. EMBRAPA (Brazil)
  5. MICINN (Spain) [AP2008-01450]
  6. Consolider (Spain) [CSD2007-00036, AGL2010-14822]
  7. EU [FOOD-CT-2006-01625]
  8. USDA (USA) [2007-04315]
  9. Facultad de Ciencias Agrarias, San Pedro (UNA)
  10. Union de Gremios de la Produccion (UGP)
  11. Empresa San Rafael Agricola y Ganadera SRL (Paraguay)
  12. Universidad Tecnica de Oruro (Bolivia)
  13. Programa de Conservacion de los Bancos de Germoplasma
  14. Instituto Colombiano Agropecuario [0482011]
  15. Ministerio de Agricultura y Desarrollo Rural (Colombia)
  16. Centro de Validacion de Tecnologias Agropecuarias (CEDEVA, Formosa, Argentina)
  17. ICREA Funding Source: Custom

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The pig, Sus scrofa, is a foreign species to the American continent. Although pigs originally introduced in the Americas should be related to those from the Iberian Peninsula and Canary islands, the phylogeny of current creole pigs that now populate the continent is likely to be very complex. Because of the extreme climates that America harbors, these populations also provide a unique example of a fast evolutionary phenomenon of adaptation. Here, we provide a genome wide study of these issues by genotyping, with a 60k SNP chip, 206 village pigs sampled across 14 countries and 183 pigs from outgroup breeds that are potential founders of the American populations, including wild boar, Iberian, international and Chinese breeds. Results show that American village pigs are primarily of European ancestry, although the observed genetic landscape is that of a complex conglomerate. There was no correlation between genetic and geographical distances, neither continent wide nor when analyzing specific areas. Most populations showed a clear admixed structure where the Iberian pig was not necessarily the main component, illustrating how international breeds, but also Chinese pigs, have contributed to extant genetic composition of American village pigs. We also observe that many genes related to the cardiovascular system show an increased differentiation between altiplano and genetically related pigs living near sea level. Heredity (2013) 110, 321-330; doi:10.1038/hdy.2012.109; published online 19 December 2012

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