Genome-wide variation, candidate regions and genes associated with fat deposition and tail morphology in Ethiopian indigenous sheep

Variations in body weight and body fat distribution are associated with feed quality and quantity, thermoregulation and energy reserve. Ethiopia is characterised by distinct agro-ecologies and human ethnic farmer’s diversity of ancient origin which have impacted on the variation of its livestock spe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ahbara, A., Bahbahani, Hussain, Almathen, F., Al Abri, M., Agoub, M.O., Abeba, A., Kebede, A., Musa, H.H., Mastrangelo, S., Pilla, F., Ciani, E., Hanotte, Olivier H., Mwacharo, Joram M.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Frontiers Media 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100246
_version_ 1855536233080422400
author Ahbara, A.
Bahbahani, Hussain
Almathen, F.
Al Abri, M.
Agoub, M.O.
Abeba, A.
Kebede, A.
Musa, H.H.
Mastrangelo, S.
Pilla, F.
Ciani, E.
Hanotte, Olivier H.
Mwacharo, Joram M.
author_browse Abeba, A.
Agoub, M.O.
Ahbara, A.
Al Abri, M.
Almathen, F.
Bahbahani, Hussain
Ciani, E.
Hanotte, Olivier H.
Kebede, A.
Mastrangelo, S.
Musa, H.H.
Mwacharo, Joram M.
Pilla, F.
author_facet Ahbara, A.
Bahbahani, Hussain
Almathen, F.
Al Abri, M.
Agoub, M.O.
Abeba, A.
Kebede, A.
Musa, H.H.
Mastrangelo, S.
Pilla, F.
Ciani, E.
Hanotte, Olivier H.
Mwacharo, Joram M.
author_sort Ahbara, A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Variations in body weight and body fat distribution are associated with feed quality and quantity, thermoregulation and energy reserve. Ethiopia is characterised by distinct agro-ecologies and human ethnic farmer’s diversity of ancient origin which have impacted on the variation of its livestock species. Here, we investigate the autosomal genome-wide profiles of 11 Ethiopian indigenous sheep populations using the Illumina Ovine 50K SNP BeadChip assay. Populations from The Caribbean, Europe, Middle East, China and western, northern and southern Africa were included addressing globally, the genetic variation and history of Ethiopian sheep populations. Population structure, PCA and phylogenetic analysis separate the Ethiopian indigenous fat-tail sheep from the North African and Middle Eastern fat-tailed sheep. It indicates two main genetic backgrounds and supports two distinct genetic history for the African fat-tailed sheep. Within Ethiopia, our results indicate that the short fat -tailed do not represent a monophyletic group. Four genetic backgrounds are present within Ethiopian sheep but at different proportions among fat-rump sheep, long fat-tailed sheep from western Ethiopia and long fat-tailed sheep from southern Ethiopia. Ethiopian fat-rump sheep were also found to share a common genetic background with Sudanese thin-tail sheep. Selection signature analysis identified eight candidate genomic regions that spanned genes influencing growth traits and fat deposition (NPR2, HINT2, SPAG8), embryonic development of tendons, bones and cartilage (EYA2, SULF2), regulation of body temperature (DIS3L2, LIN28B) and the control of lipogenesis and intracellular transport of long-chain fatty acids (SREBF1 and FABP3). Our findings indicate that Ethiopian indigenous fat-tail sheep represent a distinct genepool and an important resource for understanding the genetic control of fat metabolism and associated physiological processes.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace100246
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Frontiers Media
publisherStr Frontiers Media
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1002462024-10-03T07:40:58Z Genome-wide variation, candidate regions and genes associated with fat deposition and tail morphology in Ethiopian indigenous sheep Ahbara, A. Bahbahani, Hussain Almathen, F. Al Abri, M. Agoub, M.O. Abeba, A. Kebede, A. Musa, H.H. Mastrangelo, S. Pilla, F. Ciani, E. Hanotte, Olivier H. Mwacharo, Joram M. animal breeding breeds indigenous breeds sheep genomes research Variations in body weight and body fat distribution are associated with feed quality and quantity, thermoregulation and energy reserve. Ethiopia is characterised by distinct agro-ecologies and human ethnic farmer’s diversity of ancient origin which have impacted on the variation of its livestock species. Here, we investigate the autosomal genome-wide profiles of 11 Ethiopian indigenous sheep populations using the Illumina Ovine 50K SNP BeadChip assay. Populations from The Caribbean, Europe, Middle East, China and western, northern and southern Africa were included addressing globally, the genetic variation and history of Ethiopian sheep populations. Population structure, PCA and phylogenetic analysis separate the Ethiopian indigenous fat-tail sheep from the North African and Middle Eastern fat-tailed sheep. It indicates two main genetic backgrounds and supports two distinct genetic history for the African fat-tailed sheep. Within Ethiopia, our results indicate that the short fat -tailed do not represent a monophyletic group. Four genetic backgrounds are present within Ethiopian sheep but at different proportions among fat-rump sheep, long fat-tailed sheep from western Ethiopia and long fat-tailed sheep from southern Ethiopia. Ethiopian fat-rump sheep were also found to share a common genetic background with Sudanese thin-tail sheep. Selection signature analysis identified eight candidate genomic regions that spanned genes influencing growth traits and fat deposition (NPR2, HINT2, SPAG8), embryonic development of tendons, bones and cartilage (EYA2, SULF2), regulation of body temperature (DIS3L2, LIN28B) and the control of lipogenesis and intracellular transport of long-chain fatty acids (SREBF1 and FABP3). Our findings indicate that Ethiopian indigenous fat-tail sheep represent a distinct genepool and an important resource for understanding the genetic control of fat metabolism and associated physiological processes. 2019-01-09 2019-03-11T15:26:16Z 2019-03-11T15:26:16Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100246 en Open Access Frontiers Media Ahbara, A., Bahbahani, H., Almathen, F., Al Abri, M., Agoub, M.O., Abeba, A., Kebede, A., Musa, H.H., Mastrangelo, S., Pilla, F., Ciani, E., Hanotte, O. and Mwacharo, J.M. 2019. Genome-wide variation, candidate regions and genes associated with fat deposition and tail morphology in Ethiopian indigenous sheep. Frontiers in Genetics 9:699.
spellingShingle animal breeding
breeds
indigenous breeds
sheep
genomes
research
Ahbara, A.
Bahbahani, Hussain
Almathen, F.
Al Abri, M.
Agoub, M.O.
Abeba, A.
Kebede, A.
Musa, H.H.
Mastrangelo, S.
Pilla, F.
Ciani, E.
Hanotte, Olivier H.
Mwacharo, Joram M.
Genome-wide variation, candidate regions and genes associated with fat deposition and tail morphology in Ethiopian indigenous sheep
title Genome-wide variation, candidate regions and genes associated with fat deposition and tail morphology in Ethiopian indigenous sheep
title_full Genome-wide variation, candidate regions and genes associated with fat deposition and tail morphology in Ethiopian indigenous sheep
title_fullStr Genome-wide variation, candidate regions and genes associated with fat deposition and tail morphology in Ethiopian indigenous sheep
title_full_unstemmed Genome-wide variation, candidate regions and genes associated with fat deposition and tail morphology in Ethiopian indigenous sheep
title_short Genome-wide variation, candidate regions and genes associated with fat deposition and tail morphology in Ethiopian indigenous sheep
title_sort genome wide variation candidate regions and genes associated with fat deposition and tail morphology in ethiopian indigenous sheep
topic animal breeding
breeds
indigenous breeds
sheep
genomes
research
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/100246
work_keys_str_mv AT ahbaraa genomewidevariationcandidateregionsandgenesassociatedwithfatdepositionandtailmorphologyinethiopianindigenoussheep
AT bahbahanihussain genomewidevariationcandidateregionsandgenesassociatedwithfatdepositionandtailmorphologyinethiopianindigenoussheep
AT almathenf genomewidevariationcandidateregionsandgenesassociatedwithfatdepositionandtailmorphologyinethiopianindigenoussheep
AT alabrim genomewidevariationcandidateregionsandgenesassociatedwithfatdepositionandtailmorphologyinethiopianindigenoussheep
AT agoubmo genomewidevariationcandidateregionsandgenesassociatedwithfatdepositionandtailmorphologyinethiopianindigenoussheep
AT abebaa genomewidevariationcandidateregionsandgenesassociatedwithfatdepositionandtailmorphologyinethiopianindigenoussheep
AT kebedea genomewidevariationcandidateregionsandgenesassociatedwithfatdepositionandtailmorphologyinethiopianindigenoussheep
AT musahh genomewidevariationcandidateregionsandgenesassociatedwithfatdepositionandtailmorphologyinethiopianindigenoussheep
AT mastrangelos genomewidevariationcandidateregionsandgenesassociatedwithfatdepositionandtailmorphologyinethiopianindigenoussheep
AT pillaf genomewidevariationcandidateregionsandgenesassociatedwithfatdepositionandtailmorphologyinethiopianindigenoussheep
AT cianie genomewidevariationcandidateregionsandgenesassociatedwithfatdepositionandtailmorphologyinethiopianindigenoussheep
AT hanotteolivierh genomewidevariationcandidateregionsandgenesassociatedwithfatdepositionandtailmorphologyinethiopianindigenoussheep
AT mwacharojoramm genomewidevariationcandidateregionsandgenesassociatedwithfatdepositionandtailmorphologyinethiopianindigenoussheep