4.7 Article

Introgression, admixture, and selection facilitate genetic adaptation to high-altitude environments in cattle

期刊

GENOMICS
卷 113, 期 3, 页码 1491-1503

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ygeno.2021.03.023

关键词

Population structure; Rapid adaptation; High-density genotyping; Selective signatures; Bos species

资金

  1. Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation for Distinguished Young Scholars of China [JQ201709]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31771374]
  3. Shandong Agricultural Elite Variety Project [2019LZGC011]
  4. Major Project of National Transgene in China [2018ZX08007001-002]
  5. Innovation Engineering of Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences [CXGC2018E14]
  6. National Research Initiative grants from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture [2013-68004-20364, 2015-67015-23183, 2017-67015-26760]
  7. NIFA [687552, 2013-68004-20364] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The domestication and subsequent selection of cattle led to the partitioning of ancestral genetic diversity into distinct modern lineages, with detectable genome-wide signatures of adaptation to extreme environments. The study identified the influence of Bos grunniens and Bos javanicus on the formation of Chinese indicine breeds and revealed introgression, admixture, and migration in most of the Chinese breeds. Selection signature analyses highlighted candidate genes and pathways involved in hypoxia adaptation, and suggested that high altitude adaptation involved introgression of alleles from high-altitude adapted yaks into Chinese Bos taurus taurus.
Domestication and subsequent selection of cattle to form breeds and biological types that can adapt to different environments partitioned ancestral genetic diversity into distinct modern lineages. Genome-wide selection particularly for adaptation to extreme environments left detectable signatures genome-wide. We used highdensity genotype data for 42 cattle breeds and identified the influence of Bos grunniens and Bos javanicus on the formation of Chinese indicine breeds that led to their divergence from India-origin zebu. We also found evidence for introgression, admixture, and migration in most of the Chinese breeds. Selection signature analyses between high-altitude (>= 1800 m) and low-altitude adapted breeds (<1500 m) revealed candidate genes (ACSS2, ALDOC, EPAS1, EGLN1, NUCB2) and pathways that are putatively involved in hypoxia adaptation. Immunohistochemical, real-time PCR and CRISPR/cas9 ACSS2-knockout analyses suggest that the up-regulation of ACSS2 expression in the liver promotes the metabolic adaptation of cells to hypoxia via the hypoxia-inducible factor pathway. High altitude adaptation involved the introgression of alleles from high-altitude adapted yaks into Chinese Bos taurus taurus prior to their formation into recognized breeds and followed by selection. In addition to selection, adaptation to high altitude environments has been facilitated by admixture and introgression with locally adapted cattle populations.

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