Analysis of genotyping data reveals the unique genetic diversity represented by the breeds of sheep native to the United Kingdom.

IF 1.9 Q3 GENETICS & HEREDITY
Eleanor Kerr, Melissa M Marr, Lauren Collins, Katie Dubarry, Mazdak Salavati, Alissa Scinto, Shernae Woolley, Emily L Clark
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Abstract

Background: Sheep breeds native to the United Kingdom exhibit a striking diversity of different traits. Some of these traits are highly sustainable, such as seasonal wool shedding in the Wiltshire Horn, and are likely to become more important as pressures on sheep production increase in coming decades. Despite their clear importance to the future of sheep farming, the genetic diversity of native UK sheep breeds is poorly characterised. This increases the risk of losing the ability to select for breed-specific traits from native breeds that might be important to the UK sheep sector in the future. Here, we use 50 K genotyping to perform preliminary analysis of breed relationships and genetic diversity within native UK sheep breeds, as a first step towards a comprehensive characterisation. This study generates novel data for thirteen native UK breeds, including six on the UK Breeds at Risk (BAR) list, and utilises existing data from the publicly available Sheep HapMap dataset to investigate population structure, heterozygosity and admixture.

Results: In this study the commercial breeds exhibited high levels of admixture, weaker population structure and had higher heterozygosity compared to the other native breeds, which generally tend to be more distinct, less admixed, and have lower genetic diversity and higher kinship coefficients. Some breeds including the Wiltshire Horn, Lincoln Longwool and Ryeland showed very little admixture at all, indicating a high level of breed integrity but potentially low genetic diversity. Population structure and admixture were strongly influenced by sample size and sample provenance - highlighting the need for equal sample sizes, sufficient numbers of individuals per breed, and sampling across multiple flocks. The genetic profiles both within and between breeds were highly complex for UK sheep, reflecting the complexity in the demographic history of these breeds.

Conclusion: Our results highlight the utility of genotyping data for investigating breed diversity and genetic structure. They also suggest that routine generation of genotyping data would be very useful in informing conservation strategies for rare and declining breeds with small population sizes. We conclude that generating genetic resources for the sheep breeds that are native to the UK will help preserve the considerable genetic diversity represented by these breeds, and safe-guard this diversity as a valuable resource for the UK sheep sector to utilise in the face of future challenges.

基因分型数据分析揭示了英国本土绵羊品种所代表的独特遗传多样性。
背景:原产于英国的绵羊品种表现出惊人的多样性。其中一些性状具有很强的可持续性,例如威尔特郡角羊的季节性脱毛,随着未来几十年绵羊生产压力的增加,这些性状可能会变得更加重要。尽管英国本土绵羊品种对未来的绵羊养殖业具有明显的重要性,但它们的遗传多样性特征却很不明显。这就增加了从本土品种中选择对英国绵羊业未来可能很重要的品种特异性状的能力丧失的风险。在此,我们使用 50 K 基因分型技术对英国本土绵羊品种内部的品种关系和遗传多样性进行初步分析,作为全面鉴定的第一步。这项研究为 13 个英国本土绵羊品种(包括英国濒危品种(BAR)名单上的 6 个品种)生成了新数据,并利用来自公开绵羊 HapMap 数据集的现有数据研究了种群结构、杂合度和混杂性:在这项研究中,与其他本地品种相比,商业品种表现出较高的混杂程度、较弱的种群结构和较高的杂合度,而本地品种通常更加独特,混杂程度较低,遗传多样性较低,亲缘系数较高。一些品种,包括威尔特郡角、林肯长毛和Ryeland的混杂程度很低,这表明品种的完整性很高,但遗传多样性可能较低。种群结构和掺杂受样本大小和样本来源的影响很大--这突出表明了样本大小相等、每个品种有足够数量的个体以及在多个牛群中取样的必要性。英国绵羊品种内和品种间的遗传特征非常复杂,反映了这些品种人口历史的复杂性:我们的研究结果凸显了基因分型数据在调查品种多样性和遗传结构方面的实用性。结论:我们的研究结果凸显了基因分型数据在研究品种多样性和遗传结构方面的作用,同时也表明,常规的基因分型数据生成将非常有助于为种群规模较小的稀有和衰退品种的保护策略提供信息。我们的结论是,为英国本土的绵羊品种生成基因资源将有助于保护这些品种所代表的大量基因多样性,并将这些多样性作为英国绵羊行业的宝贵资源加以保护,以应对未来的挑战。
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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