Resequencing and signatures of selection scan in two Siberian native sheep breeds point to candidate genetic variants for adaptation and economically important traits

Anim Genet. 2021 Feb;52(1):126-131. doi: 10.1111/age.13015. Epub 2020 Oct 27.

Abstract

Russian sheep breeds represent an important economic asset by providing meat and wool, whilst being adapted to extreme climates. By resequencing two Russian breeds from Siberia: Tuva (n = 20) and Baikal (n = 20); and comparing them with a European (UK) sheep outgroup (n = 14), 41 million variants were called, and signatures of selection were identified. High-frequency missense mutations on top of selection peaks were found in genes related to immunity (LOC101109746) in the Baikal breed and wool traits (IDUA), cell differentiation (GLIS1) and fat deposition (AADACL3) in the Tuva breed. In addition, genes found under selection owing to haplotype frequency changes were related to wool traits (DSC2), parasite resistance (CLCA1), insulin receptor pathway (SOCS6) and DNA repair (DDB2) in the Baikal breed, and vision (GPR179) in the Tuva breed. Our results present candidate genes and SNPs for future selection programmes, which are necessary to maintain and increase socioeconomic gain from Siberian breeds.

Keywords: local breeds; selection; sheep; whole-genome resequencing.

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Physiological / genetics*
  • Animals
  • Breeding
  • Mutation, Missense
  • Phenotype
  • Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
  • Sheep / genetics*
  • Siberia