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Genome-wide survey of SNP variation uncovers the genetic structure of cattle breeds.

Authors :
Gibbs RA
Taylor JF
Van Tassell CP
Barendse W
Eversole KA
Gill CA
Green RD
Hamernik DL
Kappes SM
Lien S
Matukumalli LK
McEwan JC
Nazareth LV
Schnabel RD
Weinstock GM
Wheeler DA
Ajmone-Marsan P
Boettcher PJ
Caetano AR
Garcia JF
Hanotte O
Mariani P
Skow LC
Sonstegard TS
Williams JL
Diallo B
Hailemariam L
Martinez ML
Morris CA
Silva LO
Spelman RJ
Mulatu W
Zhao K
Abbey CA
Agaba M
Araujo FR
Bunch RJ
Burton J
Gorni C
Olivier H
Harrison BE
Luff B
Machado MA
Mwakaya J
Plastow G
Sim W
Smith T
Thomas MB
Valentini A
Williams P
Womack J
Woolliams JA
Liu Y
Qin X
Worley KC
Gao C
Jiang H
Moore SS
Ren Y
Song XZ
Bustamante CD
Hernandez RD
Muzny DM
Patil S
San Lucas A
Fu Q
Kent MP
Vega R
Matukumalli A
McWilliam S
Sclep G
Bryc K
Choi J
Gao H
Grefenstette JJ
Murdoch B
Stella A
Villa-Angulo R
Wright M
Aerts J
Jann O
Negrini R
Goddard ME
Hayes BJ
Bradley DG
Barbosa da Silva M
Lau LP
Liu GE
Lynn DJ
Panzitta F
Dodds KG
Source :
Science (New York, N.Y.) [Science] 2009 Apr 24; Vol. 324 (5926), pp. 528-32.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

The imprints of domestication and breed development on the genomes of livestock likely differ from those of companion animals. A deep draft sequence assembly of shotgun reads from a single Hereford female and comparative sequences sampled from six additional breeds were used to develop probes to interrogate 37,470 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 497 cattle from 19 geographically and biologically diverse breeds. These data show that cattle have undergone a rapid recent decrease in effective population size from a very large ancestral population, possibly due to bottlenecks associated with domestication, selection, and breed formation. Domestication and artificial selection appear to have left detectable signatures of selection within the cattle genome, yet the current levels of diversity within breeds are at least as great as exists within humans.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1095-9203
Volume :
324
Issue :
5926
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Science (New York, N.Y.)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
19390050
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1167936