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Landscape genomic approach to detect selection signatures in locally adapted Brazilian swine genetic groups

Authors :
Jaime Araujo Cobuci
Robson Jose Cesconeto
Stéphane Joost
José Braccini
Samuel Rezende Paiva
Concepta McManus
ROBSON JOSE CESCONETO, UFRGS
STÉPHANE JOOST, ECOLE POLYTECHNIQUE FÉDÉRALE DE LAUSANNE (EPFL), SWITZERLAND
CONCEPTA MARGARET MCMANUS, UNB
SAMUEL REZENDE PAIVA, Cenargen
JAIME ARAUJO COBUCI, UFRGS
JOSE BRACCINI, UFRGS.
Source :
Repositório Institucional da EMBRAPA (Repository Open Access to Scientific Information from EMBRAPA-Alice), Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária (Embrapa), instacron:EMBRAPA, Ecology and Evolution
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Samples of 191 animals from 18 different Brazilian locally adapted swine genetic groups were genotyped using Illumina Porcine SNP60 BeadChip in order to identify selection signatures related to the monthly variation of Brazilian environmental variables. Using BayeScan software, 71 SNP markers were identified as FST outliers and 60 genotypes (58 markers) were found by Samβada software in 371 logistic models correlated with 112 environmental variables. Five markers were identified in both methods, with a Kappa value of 0.073 (95% CI: 0.011–0.134). The frequency of these markers indicated a clear north–south country division that reflects Brazilian environmental differences in temperature, solar radiation, and precipitation. Global spatial territory correlation for environmental variables corroborates this finding (average Moran's I = 0.89, range from 0.55 to 0.97). The distribution of alleles over the territory was not strongly correlated with the breed/genetic groups. These results are congruent with previous mtDNA studies and should be used to direct germplasm collection for the National gene bank.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Repositório Institucional da EMBRAPA (Repository Open Access to Scientific Information from EMBRAPA-Alice), Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária (Embrapa), instacron:EMBRAPA, Ecology and Evolution
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....50c29d2ab50a67aeefc3ca184e26e40b