Genome-wide association analysis uncovers variants for reproductive variation across dog breeds and links to domestication.

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q2 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Samuel P Smith, Julie B Phillips, Maddison L Johnson, Patrick Abbot, John A Capra, Antonis Rokas
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Background and objectives: The diversity of eutherian reproductive strategies has led to variation in many traits, such as number of offspring, age of reproductive maturity and gestation length. While reproductive trait variation has been extensively investigated and is well established in mammals, the genetic loci contributing to this variation remain largely unknown. The domestic dog, Canis lupus familiaris is a powerful model for studies of the genetics of inherited disease due to its unique history of domestication. To gain insight into the genetic basis of reproductive traits across domestic dog breeds, we collected phenotypic data for four traits, cesarean section rate, litter size, stillbirth rate and gestation length, from primary literature and breeders' handbooks.

Methodology: By matching our phenotypic data to genomic data from the Cornell Veterinary Biobank, we performed genome-wide association analyses for these four reproductive traits, using body mass and kinship among breeds as covariates.

Results: We identified 12 genome-wide significant associations between these traits and genetic loci, including variants near CACNA2D3 with gestation length, MSRB3 and MSANTD1 with litter size, SMOC2 with cesarean section rate and UFM1 with stillbirth rate. A few of these loci, such as CACNA2D3 and MSRB3, have been previously implicated in human reproductive pathologies, whereas others have been associated with domestication-related traits, including brachycephaly (SMOC2) and coat curl (KRT71).

Conclusions and implications: We hypothesize that the artificial selection that gave rise to dog breeds also influenced the observed variation in their reproductive traits. Overall, our work establishes the domestic dog as a system for studying the genetics of reproductive biology and disease.

Lay summary: The genetic contributors to variation in mammalian reproductive traits remain largely unknown. We took advantage of the domestic dog, a powerful model system, to test for associations between genome-wide variants and four reproductive traits (cesarean section rate, litter size, stillbirth rate and gestation length) that vary extensively across breeds. We identified associations at a dozen loci, including ones previously associated with domestication-related traits, suggesting that selection on dog breeds also influenced their reproductive traits.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

全基因组关联分析揭示了不同犬种的生殖变异及其与驯化的联系。
背景与目的:真动物生殖策略的多样性导致了许多性状的变化,如后代数量、生殖成熟年龄和妊娠期长度。虽然哺乳动物的生殖性状变异已被广泛研究并得到了很好的证实,但导致这种变异的遗传位点在很大程度上仍是未知的。由于其独特的驯化历史,家犬狼疮是研究遗传疾病遗传学的有力模型。为了深入了解家犬品种生殖性状的遗传基础,我们从原始文献和育种者手册中收集了四个性状的表型数据,即剖宫产率、产仔数、死胎率和妊娠期长。方法:通过将我们的表型数据与康奈尔兽医生物库的基因组数据相匹配,我们使用体重和品种间的亲缘关系作为协变量,对这四种生殖性状进行了全基因组关联分析。结果:我们确定了这些性状与遗传位点之间的12个全基因组显著关联,包括CACNA2D3附近的变异与妊娠期长度,MSRB3和MSANTD1与产仔数,SMOC2与剖宫产率,UFM1与死产率。这些基因座中的一些,如CACNA2D3和MSRB3,先前与人类生殖疾病有关,而其他基因座则与驯化相关的性状有关,包括短头畸形(SMOC2)和毛卷曲(KRT71)。结论和启示:我们假设,人工选择产生的犬种也影响了其生殖性状的变化。总的来说,我们的工作建立了家犬作为研究生殖生物学和疾病遗传学的系统。概要:哺乳动物生殖性状变异的遗传因素在很大程度上仍然未知。我们利用了家犬这一强大的模型系统,来测试全基因组变异与四种生殖性状(剖宫产率、产仔数、死胎率和妊娠期长短)之间的关系,这些性状在不同品种之间差异很大。我们在十几个位点上发现了关联,包括那些先前与驯化相关的性状相关的位点,这表明对狗品种的选择也影响了它们的生殖性状。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health
Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health Environmental Science-Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
2.70%
发文量
37
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: About the Journal Founded by Stephen Stearns in 2013, Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health is an open access journal that publishes original, rigorous applications of evolutionary science to issues in medicine and public health. It aims to connect evolutionary biology with the health sciences to produce insights that may reduce suffering and save lives. Because evolutionary biology is a basic science that reaches across many disciplines, this journal is open to contributions on a broad range of topics.
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