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Genomic analysis of the domestication and post-Spanish conquest evolution of the llama and alpaca

Authors :
Ruiwen Fan
Zhongru Gu
Xuanmin Guang
Juan Carlos Marín
Valeria Varas
Benito A. González
Jane C. Wheeler
Yafei Hu
Erli Li
Xiaohui Sun
Xukui Yang
Chi Zhang
Wenjun Gao
Junping He
Kasper Munch
Russel Corbett-Detig
Mario Barbato
Shengkai Pan
Xiangjiang Zhan
Michael W. Bruford
Changsheng Dong
Source :
Genome Biology, Vol 21, Iss 1, Pp 1-26 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
BMC, 2020.

Abstract

Abstract Background Despite their regional economic importance and being increasingly reared globally, the origins and evolution of the llama and alpaca remain poorly understood. Here we report reference genomes for the llama, and for the guanaco and vicuña (their putative wild progenitors), compare these with the published alpaca genome, and resequence seven individuals of all four species to better understand domestication and introgression between the llama and alpaca. Results Phylogenomic analysis confirms that the llama was domesticated from the guanaco and the alpaca from the vicuña. Introgression was much higher in the alpaca genome (36%) than the llama (5%) and could be dated close to the time of the Spanish conquest, approximately 500 years ago. Introgression patterns are at their most variable on the X-chromosome of the alpaca, featuring 53 genes known to have deleterious X-linked phenotypes in humans. Strong genome-wide introgression signatures include olfactory receptor complexes into both species, hypertension resistance into alpaca, and fleece/fiber traits into llama. Genomic signatures of domestication in the llama include male reproductive traits, while in alpaca feature fleece characteristics, olfaction-related and hypoxia adaptation traits. Expression analysis of the introgressed region that is syntenic to human HSA4q21, a gene cluster previously associated with hypertension in humans under hypoxic conditions, shows a previously undocumented role for PRDM8 downregulation as a potential transcriptional regulation mechanism, analogous to that previously reported at high altitude for hypoxia-inducible factor 1α. Conclusions The unprecedented introgression signatures within both domestic camelid genomes may reflect post-conquest changes in agriculture and the breakdown of traditional management practices.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1474760X
Volume :
21
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Genome Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.f4faef6f0b045c2a0526e9bdc75f121
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-020-02080-6