Genetic diversity and population structure of indigenous chicken in Rwanda using microsatellite markers

Rwanda has about 4.5 million of indigenous chicken (IC) that are very low in productivity. To initiate any genetic improvement programme, IC needs to be accurately characterized. The key purpose of this study was to ascertain the genetic diversity of IC in Rwanda using microsatellite markers. Blood...

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Main Authors: Habimana, R., Okeno, T.O., Ngeno, K., Mboumba, S., Assami, Pauline, Gbotto, A., Tiambo, Christian K., Nishimwe, K., Mahoro, Janvier, Yao, Kouadio N.
Format: Preprint
Language:Inglés
Published: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106359
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author Habimana, R.
Okeno, T.O.
Ngeno, K.
Mboumba, S.
Assami, Pauline
Gbotto, A.
Tiambo, Christian K.
Nishimwe, K.
Mahoro, Janvier
Yao, Kouadio N.
author_browse Assami, Pauline
Gbotto, A.
Habimana, R.
Mahoro, Janvier
Mboumba, S.
Ngeno, K.
Nishimwe, K.
Okeno, T.O.
Tiambo, Christian K.
Yao, Kouadio N.
author_facet Habimana, R.
Okeno, T.O.
Ngeno, K.
Mboumba, S.
Assami, Pauline
Gbotto, A.
Tiambo, Christian K.
Nishimwe, K.
Mahoro, Janvier
Yao, Kouadio N.
author_sort Habimana, R.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Rwanda has about 4.5 million of indigenous chicken (IC) that are very low in productivity. To initiate any genetic improvement programme, IC needs to be accurately characterized. The key purpose of this study was to ascertain the genetic diversity of IC in Rwanda using microsatellite markers. Blood samples of IC sampled from 5 agro-ecological zones were collected from which DNA was extracted, amplified by PCR and genotyped using 28 microsatellite markers. A total of 325 (313 indigenous and 12 exotic) chicken were genotyped and revealed a total number of 305 alleles varying between 2 and 22 with a mean of 10.89 per locus. 186 distinct alleles and 60 private alleles were also observed. The frequency of private alleles was highest in samples from the Eastern region, whereas those from the North West had the lowest. The influx of genes was lower in the Eastern agro-ecological zone than the North West. The mean observed heterozygosity was 0.6155, whereas the average expected heterozygosity was 0.688. The overall inbreeding coefficient among the population was 0.040. Divergence from the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium was significant in 90% of loci in all the populations. The analysis of molecular variance revealed that about 92% of the total variation originated from variation within populations. Additionally, the study demonstrated that IC in Rwanda could be clustered into four gene groups. In conclusion, there was considerable genetic diversity in IC in Rwanda, which represents a crucial genetic resource that can be conserved or optimized through genetic improvement.
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spelling CGSpace1063592025-01-27T15:00:52Z Genetic diversity and population structure of indigenous chicken in Rwanda using microsatellite markers Habimana, R. Okeno, T.O. Ngeno, K. Mboumba, S. Assami, Pauline Gbotto, A. Tiambo, Christian K. Nishimwe, K. Mahoro, Janvier Yao, Kouadio N. animal breeding indigenous breeds chickens genetic diversity markets research Rwanda has about 4.5 million of indigenous chicken (IC) that are very low in productivity. To initiate any genetic improvement programme, IC needs to be accurately characterized. The key purpose of this study was to ascertain the genetic diversity of IC in Rwanda using microsatellite markers. Blood samples of IC sampled from 5 agro-ecological zones were collected from which DNA was extracted, amplified by PCR and genotyped using 28 microsatellite markers. A total of 325 (313 indigenous and 12 exotic) chicken were genotyped and revealed a total number of 305 alleles varying between 2 and 22 with a mean of 10.89 per locus. 186 distinct alleles and 60 private alleles were also observed. The frequency of private alleles was highest in samples from the Eastern region, whereas those from the North West had the lowest. The influx of genes was lower in the Eastern agro-ecological zone than the North West. The mean observed heterozygosity was 0.6155, whereas the average expected heterozygosity was 0.688. The overall inbreeding coefficient among the population was 0.040. Divergence from the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium was significant in 90% of loci in all the populations. The analysis of molecular variance revealed that about 92% of the total variation originated from variation within populations. Additionally, the study demonstrated that IC in Rwanda could be clustered into four gene groups. In conclusion, there was considerable genetic diversity in IC in Rwanda, which represents a crucial genetic resource that can be conserved or optimized through genetic improvement. 2019-10-30 2020-01-03T08:53:59Z 2020-01-03T08:53:59Z Preprint https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106359 en Open Access Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Habimana, R., Okeno, T.O., Ngeno, K., Mboumba, S., Assami, P., Gbotto, A., Keambou, C.T., Nishimwe, K., Mahoro, J. and Yao, N. 2019. Genetic diversity and population structure of indigenous chicken in Rwanda using microsatellite markers. bioRxiv
spellingShingle animal breeding
indigenous breeds
chickens
genetic diversity
markets
research
Habimana, R.
Okeno, T.O.
Ngeno, K.
Mboumba, S.
Assami, Pauline
Gbotto, A.
Tiambo, Christian K.
Nishimwe, K.
Mahoro, Janvier
Yao, Kouadio N.
Genetic diversity and population structure of indigenous chicken in Rwanda using microsatellite markers
title Genetic diversity and population structure of indigenous chicken in Rwanda using microsatellite markers
title_full Genetic diversity and population structure of indigenous chicken in Rwanda using microsatellite markers
title_fullStr Genetic diversity and population structure of indigenous chicken in Rwanda using microsatellite markers
title_full_unstemmed Genetic diversity and population structure of indigenous chicken in Rwanda using microsatellite markers
title_short Genetic diversity and population structure of indigenous chicken in Rwanda using microsatellite markers
title_sort genetic diversity and population structure of indigenous chicken in rwanda using microsatellite markers
topic animal breeding
indigenous breeds
chickens
genetic diversity
markets
research
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/106359
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