作者
Feng‐Hua Lv,Yin-Hong Cao,Guangjian Liu,Ling-Yun Luo,Ran Lu,Mingjun Liu,Wenrong Li,Ping Zhou,Xinhua Wang,Min Shen,Lei Gao,Jingquan Yang,Hua Yang,Yonglin Yang,Changbin Liu,Pengcheng Wan,Yunsheng Zhang,Wenhui Pi,Yan-Ling Ren,Zhiqiang Shen,Feng Wang,Yutao Wang,Jinquan Li,Hosein Salehian-Dehkordi,EEr Hehua,Liu Yonggang,Jianfei Chen,Li Wang,Xuemei Deng,Ali Esmailizadeh,Mostafa Dehghani-Qanatqestani,Hadi Charati,Maryam Nosrati,Ondřej Štěpánek,Hossam E. Rushdi,Ingrid Olsaker,Ino Čurik,Neena Amatya Gorkhali,Samuel Rezende Paiva,Alexandre Rodrigues Caetano,Elena Ciani,Marcel Amills,Christina Weimann,Georg Erhardt,Agraw Amane,Joram M. Mwacharo,Jianlin Han,Olivier Hanotte,P. Kathiravan,Anna M. Johansson,Jón Hallsteinn Hallsson,Juha Kantanen,David W. Coltman,Michael W. Bruford,Johannes A. Lenstra,Meng-Hua Li
摘要
Domestic sheep and their wild relatives harbor substantial genetic variants that can form the backbone of molecular breeding, but their genome landscapes remain understudied. Here, we present a comprehensive genome resource for wild ovine species, landraces and improved breeds of domestic sheep, comprising high-coverage (∼16.10×) whole genomes of 810 samples from 7 wild species and 158 diverse domestic populations. We detected, in total, ∼121.2 million single nucleotide polymorphisms, ∼61 million of which are novel. Some display significant (P < 0.001) differences in frequency between wild and domestic species, or are private to continent-wide or individual sheep populations. Retained or introgressed wild gene variants in domestic populations have contributed to local adaptation, such as the variation in the HBB associated with plateau adaptation. We identified novel and previously reported targets of selection on morphological and agronomic traits such as stature, horn, tail configuration, and wool fineness. We explored the genetic basis of wool fineness and unveiled a novel mutation (chr25: T7,068,586C) in the 3'-UTR of IRF2BP2 as plausible causal variant for fleece fiber diameter. We reconstructed prehistorical migrations from the Near Eastern domestication center to South-and-Southeast Asia and found two main waves of migrations across the Eurasian Steppe and the Iranian Plateau in the Early and Late Bronze Ages. Our findings refine our understanding of genome variation as shaped by continental migrations, introgression, adaptation, and selection of sheep.