Whole-Genome Resequencing of Red Junglefowl and Indigenous Village Chicken Reveal New Insights on the Genome Dynamics of the Species
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Raman Lawal, Raed Al-Atiyat, Riyadh Aljumaah, Pradeepa Silva, Joram Mwacharo, Olivier Hanotte. (20/7/2018). Whole-Genome Resequencing of Red Junglefowl and Indigenous Village Chicken Reveal New Insights on the Genome Dynamics of the Species. Frontiers in Genetics, 9 (264).
Abstract
The red junglefowl Gallus gallus is the main progenitor of domestic chicken, the
commonest livestock species, outnumbering humans by an approximate ratio of six
to one. The genetic control for production traits have been well studied in commercial
chicken, but the selection pressures underlying unique adaptation and production to
local environments remain largely unknown in indigenous village chicken. Likewise, the
genome regions under positive selection in the wild red junglefowl remain untapped.
Here, using the pool heterozygosity approach, we analyzed indigenous village chicken
populations from Ethiopia, Saudi Arabia, and Sri Lanka, alongside six red junglefowl,
for signatures of positive selection across the autosomes. Two red junglefowl candidate
selected regions were shared with all domestic chicken populations. Four candidates
sweep regions, unique to and shared among all indigenous domestic chicken, were
detected. Only one region includes annotated genes (TSHR and GTF2A1). Candidate
regions that were unique to each domestic chicken population with functions relating
to adaptation to temperature gradient, production, reproduction and immunity were
identified. Our results provide new insights on the consequence of the selection pressures
that followed domestication on the genome landscape of the domestic village chicken.
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Author(s) ORCID(s)
Mwacharo, Joram https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6981-8140
Hanotte, Olivier https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2877-4767
Hanotte, Olivier https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2877-4767