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Genomic analysis reveals genes affecting distinct phenotypes among different Chinese and western pig breeds

Zhe Zhang, Qian Xiao, Qian qian Zhang, Hao Sun, Jiu cheng Chen, Zheng cao Li, Ming Xue, Pei pei Ma, Hong jie Yang, Ning ying Xu, Qi-shan Wang*, Yu chun Pan

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

36 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The differences in artificial and natural selection have been some of the factors contributing to phenotypic diversity between Chinese and western pigs. Here, 830 individuals from western and Chinese pig breeds were genotyped using the reduced-representation genotyping method. First, we identified the selection signatures for different pig breeds. By comparing Chinese pigs and western pigs along the first principal component, the growth gene IGF1R; the immune genes IL1R1, IL1RL1, DUSP10, RAC3 and SWAP70; the meat quality-related gene SNORA50 and the olfactory gene OR1F1 were identified as candidate differentiated targets. Further, along a principal component separating Pudong White pigs from others, a potential causal gene for coat colour (EDNRB) was discovered. In addition, the divergent signatures evaluated by F st within Chinese pig breeds found genes associated with the phenotypic features of coat colour, meat quality and feed efficiency among these indigenous pigs. Second, admixture and genomic introgression analysis were performed. Shan pigs have introgressed genes from Berkshire, Yorkshire and Hongdenglong pigs. The results of introgression mapping showed that this introgression conferred adaption to the local environment and coat colour of Chinese pigs and the superior productivity of western pigs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number13352
JournalScientific Reports
Volume8
Pages (from-to)1-12
ISSN2045-2322
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

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