The natural adaptation and human selection history of African sheep genomes

Author:

Ahbara Abulgasim M.ORCID,Robert Christelle,Kebede Adebabay,Abeba Ayelle,Latairish Suliman,Agoub Mukhtar Omar,Musa Hassan H.,Wiener Pam,Clark Emily,Hanotte Olivier,Mwacharo Joram M.

Abstract

AbstractAfrican sheep manifest diverse but distinct physio-anatomical traits which are the outcomes of natural- and human-driven selection. Here, we generated 34.8 million variants from 150 indigenous African sheep genomes sequenced at an average depth of ∼54x for 130 samples (Ethiopia, Libya) and ∼10x for 20 samples (Sudan), representing sheep from diverse environments, tail morphology and post-Neolithic introductions to Africa. Phylogenetic and model-based admixture analysis provided evidence of four genetic groups that correspond to altitudinal geographic origins and tail morphotypes. Comparative genomic analysis identified targets of selection spanning conserved haplotype structures overlapping genes and gene families relating to hypoxia responses, caudal vertebrae and tail skeleton length, ear morphology, and tail fat-depot structure. Our findings provide novel insights underpinning variation and response to human selection and environmental adaptation, and possible pleiotropic gene interactions in indigenous African sheep genomes, which guaranteed the successful establishment of the species on the continent.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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