Affiliation:
1. Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences
2. The University of Hong Kong
3. Hainan Academy of Agricultural Sciences
Abstract
Abstract
Background:Long-term natural and artificial selection resulted in many genetic footprints within the genomes of pig breeds across distinct agroecological zones. Nevertheless, the mechanisms of how these signatures contribute to phenotypic diversity and facilitate environmental adaptation remain unclear.
Results: Here, we leveraged whole-genome sequencing data of 82 individuals from six domestic pig breeds originating in tropical, frigid, and high-altitude regions. Population genetic analysis suggested that environmental adaptations significantly contributed to population stratification in Chinese local pig breeds. Analysis of selection signals identified regions under selection for tropical adaptation (55.5 Mb), high-altitude adaptation (43.6 Mb), and frigid adaptation (17.72 Mb). The potential functions of the selective sweep regions were linked to certain complex traits that might play critical roles in different geographic environments, including fat coverage in frigid environments and blood indicators in tropical and high-altitude environments. Candidate genes under selection were significantly enriched in the biological pathways involved in environmental adaptations. These pathways contained blood circulation, protein degradation, and inflammation for tropical adaptation; heart and lung development, hypoxia response, and DNA damage repair for high-altitude adaptation; andthermogenesis, cold-induced vasodilation (CIVD), and cell cycle for frigid adaptation. By examining the chromatin state of the selection signatures, we detected the lung and ileum as two critically functional tissues for environmental adaptations. Finally, we unveiled a mutation (chr1: G246,175,129A) in cis-regulatory regions of ABCA1 as a plausible promising variant for tropical adaptation.
Conclusions: In this study, we conducted a genome-wide exploration of the genetic mechanisms underlying the tropical, frigid, and high-altitude adaptability of Chinese local pig breeds. Our findings shed light on the prominent role of cis-regulatory elements in impacting environmental adaptation in pigs and may serve as a vital biomodel on human plateau-related disorders and cardiovascular diseases.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC