Population Genetic Analysis of Six Chinese Indigenous Pig Meta-Populations Based on Geographically Isolated Regions

Author:

Zhang Lige1,Zhang Songyuan1,Zhan Fengting1,Song Mingkun1,Shang Peng2,Zhu Fangxian3,Li Jiang4,Yang Feng1ORCID,Li Xiuling1ORCID,Qiao Ruimin1ORCID,Han Xuelei1,Li Xinjian1,Liu Gang3,Wang Kejun1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Animal Science and Technology, Henan Agricultural University, Zhengzhou 450002, China

2. Animal Science College, Tibet Agriculture and Animal Husbandry University, Linzhi 860000, China

3. National Animal Husbandry Service, Beijing 100193, China

4. National Supercomputing Center in Zhengzhou, Zhengzhou 450001, China

Abstract

The diversification of indigenous pig breeds in China has resulted from multiple climate, topographic, and human cultural influences. The numerous indigenous pig breeds can be geographically divided into six meta-populations; however, their genetic relationships, contributions to genetic diversity, and genetic signatures remain unclear. Whole-genome SNP data for 613 indigenous pigs from the six Chinese meta-populations were obtained and analyzed. Population genetic analyses confirmed significant genetic differentiation and a moderate mixture among the Chinese indigenous pig meta-populations. The North China (NC) meta-population had the largest contribution to genetic and allelic diversity. Evidence from selective sweep signatures revealed that genes related to fat deposition and heat stress response (EPAS1, NFE2L2, VPS13A, SPRY1, PLA2G4A, and UBE3D) were potentially involved in adaptations to cold and heat. These findings from population genetic analyses provide a better understanding of indigenous pig characteristics in different environments and a theoretical basis for future work on the conservation and breeding of Chinese indigenous pigs.

Funder

Grand Science and Technology Special Project in Tibet

National Science Foundation of China

Starting Foundation for Outstanding Young Scientists of Henan Agricultural University

National Key R&D Program

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

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