Candidate signatures of positive selection for environmental adaptation in indigenous African cattle: A review

Author:

Kambal Sumaya123ORCID,Tijjani Abdulfatai45ORCID,Ibrahim Sabah A. E.3ORCID,Ahmed Mohamed‐Khair A.2,Mwacharo Joram M.67,Hanotte Olivier148ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Livestock Genetics International Livestock Research Institute Addis Ababa Ethiopia

2. Department of Genetics and Animal Breeding, Faculty of Animal Production University of Khartoum Khartoum Sudan

3. Department of Bioinformatics and Biostatistics National University Khartoum Sudan

4. Centre for Tropical Livestock Genetics and Health International Livestock Research Institute Addis Ababa Ethiopia

5. The Jackson Laboratory Bar Harbor Maine USA

6. Scotland's Rural College and Centre for Tropical Livestock Genetics and Health Edinburgh UK

7. Small Ruminant Genomics International Centre for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas Addis Ababa Ethiopia

8. School of Life Sciences University of Nottingham Nottingham UK

Abstract

AbstractEnvironmental adaptation traits of indigenous African cattle are increasingly being investigated to respond to the need for sustainable livestock production in the context of unpredictable climatic changes. Several studies have highlighted genomic regions under positive selection probably associated with adaptation to environmental challenges (e.g. heat stress, trypanosomiasis, tick and tick‐borne diseases). However, little attention has focused on pinpointing the candidate causative variant(s) controlling the traits. This review compiled information from 22 studies on signatures of positive selection in indigenous African cattle breeds to identify regions under positive selection. We highlight some key candidate genome regions and genes of relevance to the challenges of living in extreme environments (high temperature, high altitude, high infectious disease prevalence). They include candidate genes involved in biological pathways relating to innate and adaptive immunity (e.g. BoLAs, SPAG11, IL1RL2 and GFI1B), heat stress (e.g. HSPs, SOD1 and PRLH) and hypoxia responses (e.g. BDNF and INPP4A). Notably, the highest numbers of candidate regions are found on BTA3, BTA5 and BTA7. They overlap with genes playing roles in several biological functions and pathways. These include but are not limited to growth and feed intake, cell stability, protein stability and sweat gland development. This review may further guide targeted genome studies aiming to assess the importance of candidate causative mutations, within regulatory and protein‐coding genome regions, to further understand the biological mechanisms underlying African cattle's unique adaption.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

University of Nottingham

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology,General Medicine

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