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Genomic Scan Reveals Loci under Altitude Adaptation in Tibetan and Dahe Pigs

High altitude environments are of particular interest in the studies of local adaptation as well as their implications in physiology and clinical medicine in human. Some Chinese pig breeds, such as Tibetan pig (TBP) that is well adapted to the high altitude and Dahe pig (DHP) that dwells at the mode...

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Autores principales: Dong, Kunzhe, Yao, Na, Pu, Yabin, He, Xiaohong, Zhao, Qianjun, Luan, Yizhao, Guan, Weijun, Rao, Shaoqi, Ma, Yuehui
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4201535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25329542
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110520
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author Dong, Kunzhe
Yao, Na
Pu, Yabin
He, Xiaohong
Zhao, Qianjun
Luan, Yizhao
Guan, Weijun
Rao, Shaoqi
Ma, Yuehui
author_facet Dong, Kunzhe
Yao, Na
Pu, Yabin
He, Xiaohong
Zhao, Qianjun
Luan, Yizhao
Guan, Weijun
Rao, Shaoqi
Ma, Yuehui
author_sort Dong, Kunzhe
collection PubMed
description High altitude environments are of particular interest in the studies of local adaptation as well as their implications in physiology and clinical medicine in human. Some Chinese pig breeds, such as Tibetan pig (TBP) that is well adapted to the high altitude and Dahe pig (DHP) that dwells at the moderate altitude, provide ideal materials to study local adaptation to altitudes. Yet, it is still short of in-depth analysis and understanding of the genetic adaptation to high altitude in the two pig populations. In this study we conducted a genomic scan for selective sweeps using F(ST) to identify genes showing evidence of local adaptations in TBP and DHP, with Wuzhishan pig (WZSP) as the low-altitude reference. Totally, we identified 12 specific selective genes (CCBE1, F2RL1, AGGF1, ZFPM2, IL2, FGF5, PLA2G4A, ADAMTS9, NRBF2, JMJD1C, VEGFC and ADAM19) for TBP and six (OGG1, FOXM, FLT3, RTEL1, CRELD1 and RHOG) for DHP. In addition, six selective genes (VPS13A, GNA14, GDAP1, PARP8, FGF10 and ADAMTS16) were shared by the two pig breeds. Among these selective genes, three (VEGFC, FGF10 and ADAMTS9) were previously reported to be linked to the local adaptation to high altitudes in pigs, while many others were newly identified by this study. Further bioinformatics analysis demonstrated that majority of these selective signatures have some biological functions relevant to the altitude adaptation, for examples, response to hypoxia, development of blood vessels, DNA repair and several hematological involvements. These results suggest that the local adaptation to high altitude environments is sophisticated, involving numerous genes and multiple biological processes, and the shared selective signatures by the two pig breeds may provide an effective avenue to identify the common adaptive mechanisms to different altitudes.
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spelling pubmed-42015352014-10-21 Genomic Scan Reveals Loci under Altitude Adaptation in Tibetan and Dahe Pigs Dong, Kunzhe Yao, Na Pu, Yabin He, Xiaohong Zhao, Qianjun Luan, Yizhao Guan, Weijun Rao, Shaoqi Ma, Yuehui PLoS One Research Article High altitude environments are of particular interest in the studies of local adaptation as well as their implications in physiology and clinical medicine in human. Some Chinese pig breeds, such as Tibetan pig (TBP) that is well adapted to the high altitude and Dahe pig (DHP) that dwells at the moderate altitude, provide ideal materials to study local adaptation to altitudes. Yet, it is still short of in-depth analysis and understanding of the genetic adaptation to high altitude in the two pig populations. In this study we conducted a genomic scan for selective sweeps using F(ST) to identify genes showing evidence of local adaptations in TBP and DHP, with Wuzhishan pig (WZSP) as the low-altitude reference. Totally, we identified 12 specific selective genes (CCBE1, F2RL1, AGGF1, ZFPM2, IL2, FGF5, PLA2G4A, ADAMTS9, NRBF2, JMJD1C, VEGFC and ADAM19) for TBP and six (OGG1, FOXM, FLT3, RTEL1, CRELD1 and RHOG) for DHP. In addition, six selective genes (VPS13A, GNA14, GDAP1, PARP8, FGF10 and ADAMTS16) were shared by the two pig breeds. Among these selective genes, three (VEGFC, FGF10 and ADAMTS9) were previously reported to be linked to the local adaptation to high altitudes in pigs, while many others were newly identified by this study. Further bioinformatics analysis demonstrated that majority of these selective signatures have some biological functions relevant to the altitude adaptation, for examples, response to hypoxia, development of blood vessels, DNA repair and several hematological involvements. These results suggest that the local adaptation to high altitude environments is sophisticated, involving numerous genes and multiple biological processes, and the shared selective signatures by the two pig breeds may provide an effective avenue to identify the common adaptive mechanisms to different altitudes. Public Library of Science 2014-10-17 /pmc/articles/PMC4201535/ /pubmed/25329542 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110520 Text en © 2014 Dong et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dong, Kunzhe
Yao, Na
Pu, Yabin
He, Xiaohong
Zhao, Qianjun
Luan, Yizhao
Guan, Weijun
Rao, Shaoqi
Ma, Yuehui
Genomic Scan Reveals Loci under Altitude Adaptation in Tibetan and Dahe Pigs
title Genomic Scan Reveals Loci under Altitude Adaptation in Tibetan and Dahe Pigs
title_full Genomic Scan Reveals Loci under Altitude Adaptation in Tibetan and Dahe Pigs
title_fullStr Genomic Scan Reveals Loci under Altitude Adaptation in Tibetan and Dahe Pigs
title_full_unstemmed Genomic Scan Reveals Loci under Altitude Adaptation in Tibetan and Dahe Pigs
title_short Genomic Scan Reveals Loci under Altitude Adaptation in Tibetan and Dahe Pigs
title_sort genomic scan reveals loci under altitude adaptation in tibetan and dahe pigs
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4201535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25329542
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110520
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