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Ancient autozygous segments subject to positive selection suggest adaptive immune responses in West African cattle

•Genomic areas under selection originated on the time in which domestic cattle entered into West Africa are analyzed.•New genomic areas and candidate genes inform on cattle adaptation to the harsh environment of West Africa.•Taurine cattle harbor genes associated with innate immunity, bitter taste r...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Gene 2021-11, Vol.803, p.145899-145899, Article 145899
Main Authors: Goyache, Félix, Pérez-Pardal, Lucía, Fernández, Iván, Traoré, Amadou, Menéndez-Arias, Nuria A., Álvarez, Isabel
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Genomic areas under selection originated on the time in which domestic cattle entered into West Africa are analyzed.•New genomic areas and candidate genes inform on cattle adaptation to the harsh environment of West Africa.•Taurine cattle harbor genes associated with innate immunity, bitter taste receptor activity and body size.•It is confirmed enhanced immune ability in sanga cattle and higher ectoparasite resistance in zebu cattle. Small-sized and trypanotolerant West African taurine (Bos taurus) cattle are a unique case of human-mediated process of adaptation to a challenging environment. Extensive gene flow with Sahelian zebu (B. indicus), bigger and with some resistance to tick attack, occurred for centuries and allowed the apparition of stable crossbred populations (sanga) having intermediate characteristics. Up to 237 individuals belonging to 10 different taurine, zebu and sanga cattle populations sampled in Benin, Burkina Faso and Niger were typed using the BovineHD BeadChip of Illumina to identify signatures of selection, assessed using three different Extended-Haplotype-Homozygosity-based statistics, overlapping with ancient, originated 1024 or 2048 generations ago, Homozygosity-By-Descent segments in the cattle genome. Candidate genomic regions were defined ensuring their importance within cattle type and using zebu as reference. Functional annotation analysis identified four statistically significant Annotation Clusters in taurine cattle (from ACt1 to ACt4), one (ACs1) in sanga, and another (ACz1) in zebu cattle, fitting well with expectations. ACt1 included genes primarily associated with innate immunity; ACt2 involved bitter taste receptor genes of importance to adaptation to changing environments; ACt3 included 68 genes coding ATP-binding proteins, some of them located on trypanotolerance-related QTL regions, that can partially underlie immune response and the additive mechanism of trypanotolerance; ACt4 was associated with growth and small size (NPPC gene); ACs1 included genes involved in immune response; and ACz1 is related with ectoparasite resistance. Our results provide a new set of genomic areas and candidate genes giving new insights on the genomic impact of adaptation in West African cattle.
ISSN:0378-1119
1879-0038
DOI:10.1016/j.gene.2021.145899