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Genetic variability of Akhal-Teke horses bred in Italy

BACKGROUND: The Akhal-Teke horse (AKH) is native of the modern Turkmenistan area. It was introduced in Italy from 1991 to 2000 mainly as an endurance horse. This paper characterizes the genetic variability of the whole Italian AKH horse population and evaluates their inbreeding level by analyzing mi...

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Autores principales: Cozzi, Maria C., Strillacci, Maria G., Valiati, Paolo, Rogliano, Elisa, Bagnato, Alessandro, Longeri, Maria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6129384/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30202639
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.4889
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author Cozzi, Maria C.
Strillacci, Maria G.
Valiati, Paolo
Rogliano, Elisa
Bagnato, Alessandro
Longeri, Maria
author_facet Cozzi, Maria C.
Strillacci, Maria G.
Valiati, Paolo
Rogliano, Elisa
Bagnato, Alessandro
Longeri, Maria
author_sort Cozzi, Maria C.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The Akhal-Teke horse (AKH) is native of the modern Turkmenistan area. It was introduced in Italy from 1991 to 2000 mainly as an endurance horse. This paper characterizes the genetic variability of the whole Italian AKH horse population and evaluates their inbreeding level by analyzing microsatellite markers and mitochondrial D-Loop sequences. METHODS: Seventeen microsatellite marker loci were genotyped on 95 DNA samples from almost all the AKH horses bred in Italy in the last 20 years. Standard genetic variability measures (H(o), H(e), F(IS)) were compared against the same variables published on other eight AKH populations. In addition, 397 bp of mtDNA D-loop region were sequenced on a sub-group of 22 unrelated AKH out of the 95 sampled ones, and on 11 unrelated Arab horses. The haplotypes identified in the Italian population were aligned to sequences of AKH (56), Arab (five), Caspian Pony (13), Przewalskii (two) and Barb (15) horses available in GenBank. The Median Joining Network (MJN), Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Neighbor-joining (NJ) tree were calculated on the total 126 sequences. RESULTS: Nucleic markers showed a high degree of polymorphism (H(o) = 0.642; H(e) = 0.649) and a low inbreeding level (F(IS) = 0.016) in Italian horses, compared to other AKH populations (ranged from −0.103 AKH from Estonia to 0.114 AKH from Czech Republic). High variability was also recorded in the D-Loop region. 11 haplotypes were identified with haplotype diversity (hd), nucleotide diversity (π) and average number of nucleotide differences (k) of 0.938, 0.021 and 6.448, respectively. When all the 126 D-Loop sequences were compared, 51 haplotypes were found, and four were here found only in the Italian AKH horses. The 51 haplotypes were conformed to eight recognized mtDNA haplogroups (A, C, F, G, L, M, P and Q) and confirmed by MJN analysis, Italian horses being assigned to five haplogroups (A, C, G, L and M). Using a PCA approach to the same data, the total haplotypes were grouped into two clusters including A+C+M+P and G+F haplogroups, while L and Q haplogroups remained ungrouped. Finally, the NJ algorithm effectively discretizes only the L haplogroup. All the above data univocally indicate good genetic variability and accurate management of the Akhal-Teke population in Italy.
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spelling pubmed-61293842018-09-10 Genetic variability of Akhal-Teke horses bred in Italy Cozzi, Maria C. Strillacci, Maria G. Valiati, Paolo Rogliano, Elisa Bagnato, Alessandro Longeri, Maria PeerJ Biodiversity BACKGROUND: The Akhal-Teke horse (AKH) is native of the modern Turkmenistan area. It was introduced in Italy from 1991 to 2000 mainly as an endurance horse. This paper characterizes the genetic variability of the whole Italian AKH horse population and evaluates their inbreeding level by analyzing microsatellite markers and mitochondrial D-Loop sequences. METHODS: Seventeen microsatellite marker loci were genotyped on 95 DNA samples from almost all the AKH horses bred in Italy in the last 20 years. Standard genetic variability measures (H(o), H(e), F(IS)) were compared against the same variables published on other eight AKH populations. In addition, 397 bp of mtDNA D-loop region were sequenced on a sub-group of 22 unrelated AKH out of the 95 sampled ones, and on 11 unrelated Arab horses. The haplotypes identified in the Italian population were aligned to sequences of AKH (56), Arab (five), Caspian Pony (13), Przewalskii (two) and Barb (15) horses available in GenBank. The Median Joining Network (MJN), Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Neighbor-joining (NJ) tree were calculated on the total 126 sequences. RESULTS: Nucleic markers showed a high degree of polymorphism (H(o) = 0.642; H(e) = 0.649) and a low inbreeding level (F(IS) = 0.016) in Italian horses, compared to other AKH populations (ranged from −0.103 AKH from Estonia to 0.114 AKH from Czech Republic). High variability was also recorded in the D-Loop region. 11 haplotypes were identified with haplotype diversity (hd), nucleotide diversity (π) and average number of nucleotide differences (k) of 0.938, 0.021 and 6.448, respectively. When all the 126 D-Loop sequences were compared, 51 haplotypes were found, and four were here found only in the Italian AKH horses. The 51 haplotypes were conformed to eight recognized mtDNA haplogroups (A, C, F, G, L, M, P and Q) and confirmed by MJN analysis, Italian horses being assigned to five haplogroups (A, C, G, L and M). Using a PCA approach to the same data, the total haplotypes were grouped into two clusters including A+C+M+P and G+F haplogroups, while L and Q haplogroups remained ungrouped. Finally, the NJ algorithm effectively discretizes only the L haplogroup. All the above data univocally indicate good genetic variability and accurate management of the Akhal-Teke population in Italy. PeerJ Inc. 2018-09-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6129384/ /pubmed/30202639 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.4889 Text en ©2018 Cozzi 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Cozzi, Maria C.
Strillacci, Maria G.
Valiati, Paolo
Rogliano, Elisa
Bagnato, Alessandro
Longeri, Maria
Genetic variability of Akhal-Teke horses bred in Italy
title Genetic variability of Akhal-Teke horses bred in Italy
title_full Genetic variability of Akhal-Teke horses bred in Italy
title_fullStr Genetic variability of Akhal-Teke horses bred in Italy
title_full_unstemmed Genetic variability of Akhal-Teke horses bred in Italy
title_short Genetic variability of Akhal-Teke horses bred in Italy
title_sort genetic variability of akhal-teke horses bred in italy
topic Biodiversity
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6129384/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30202639
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.4889
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