The maternal origin of indigenous domestic chicken from the Middle East, the north and the horn of Africa
Abstract Background Indigenous domestic chicken represents a major source of protein for agricultural communities around the world. In the Middle East and Africa, they are adapted to hot dry and semi-dry areas, in contrast to their wild ancestor, the Red junglefowl, which lives in humid and sub-humi...
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doaj-0b1034965b154d3b96eb5f33f339eb962020-11-25T03:50:57ZengBMCBMC Genetics1471-21562020-03-0121111610.1186/s12863-020-0830-0The maternal origin of indigenous domestic chicken from the Middle East, the north and the horn of AfricaAhmed S. Al-Jumaili0Selma Farah Boudali1Adebabay Kebede2Sahar A. Al-Bayatti3Abdulamir A. Essa4Abulgasim Ahbara5Riyadh S. Aljumaah6Raed M. Alatiyat7Joram M. Mwacharo8Gro Bjørnstad9Arifa N. Naqvi10Semir Bechir Suheil Gaouar11Olivier Hanotte12School of Life Sciences, the University of Nottingham, University ParkLaboratoire de Génétique Moléculaire et Cellulaire, Université des Sciences et de la Technologie d’Oran Mohamed BoudiafAmhara Regional Agricultural Research Institute (ARARI)Animal Sources Department, Directorate of Animal Resources, Ministry of AgricultureAnimal Sources Department, Directorate of Animal Resources, Ministry of AgricultureSchool of Life Sciences, the University of Nottingham, University ParkAnimal Biotechnology, Animal Science Department, College of Food and Agriculture, King Saud UniversityGenetics and Biotechnology, Animal Science Department, Agriculture Faculty, Mutah UniversitySmall Ruminant Genetics and Genomics Group, International Centre for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA)Department of Forensic Sciences, Oslo University HospitalFaculty of Life Sciences, Karakorum International UniversityPhysiopathology and Biochemical of Nutrition (PpBioNut), University of TlemcenSchool of Life Sciences, the University of Nottingham, University ParkAbstract Background Indigenous domestic chicken represents a major source of protein for agricultural communities around the world. In the Middle East and Africa, they are adapted to hot dry and semi-dry areas, in contrast to their wild ancestor, the Red junglefowl, which lives in humid and sub-humid tropical areas. Indigenous populations are declining following increased demand for poultry meat and eggs, favouring the more productive exotic commercial breeds. In this paper, using the D-loop of mitochondrial DNA as a maternally inherited genetic marker, we address the question of the origin and dispersal routes of domestic chicken of the Middle East (Iraq and Saudi Arabia), the northern part of the African continent (Algeria and Libya) and the Horn of Africa (Ethiopia). Results The analysis of the mtDNA D-loop of 706 chicken samples from Iraq (n = 107), Saudi Arabia (n = 185), Algeria (n = 88), Libya (n = 23), Ethiopia (n = 211) and Pakistan (n = 92) show the presence of five haplogroups (A, B, C, D and E), suggesting more than one maternal origin for the studied populations. Haplogroup E, which occurred in 625 samples, was the most frequent in all countries. This haplogroup most likely originates from the Indian subcontinent and probably migrated following a terrestrial route to these different countries. Haplotypes belonging to haplogroup D were present in all countries except Algeria and Libya, it is likely a legacy of the Indian Ocean maritime trading network. Haplogroup A was present in all countries and may be of commercial origin. Haplogroup B was found only in Ethiopia. Haplogroup C was only detected in the South-Western region of Saudi Arabia and in Ethiopia. Conclusion The results support a major influence of the Indian subcontinent on the maternal diversity of the today’s chicken populations examined here. Most of the diversity occurs within rather than between populations. This lack of phylogeographic signal agrees with both ancient and more recent trading networks having shaped the modern-day diversity of indigenous chicken across populations and countries.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12863-020-0830-0Domestic chickenDispersal routesGenetic diversityMiddle EastAfrica |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ahmed S. Al-Jumaili Selma Farah Boudali Adebabay Kebede Sahar A. Al-Bayatti Abdulamir A. Essa Abulgasim Ahbara Riyadh S. Aljumaah Raed M. Alatiyat Joram M. Mwacharo Gro Bjørnstad Arifa N. Naqvi Semir Bechir Suheil Gaouar Olivier Hanotte |
spellingShingle |
Ahmed S. Al-Jumaili Selma Farah Boudali Adebabay Kebede Sahar A. Al-Bayatti Abdulamir A. Essa Abulgasim Ahbara Riyadh S. Aljumaah Raed M. Alatiyat Joram M. Mwacharo Gro Bjørnstad Arifa N. Naqvi Semir Bechir Suheil Gaouar Olivier Hanotte The maternal origin of indigenous domestic chicken from the Middle East, the north and the horn of Africa BMC Genetics Domestic chicken Dispersal routes Genetic diversity Middle East Africa |
author_facet |
Ahmed S. Al-Jumaili Selma Farah Boudali Adebabay Kebede Sahar A. Al-Bayatti Abdulamir A. Essa Abulgasim Ahbara Riyadh S. Aljumaah Raed M. Alatiyat Joram M. Mwacharo Gro Bjørnstad Arifa N. Naqvi Semir Bechir Suheil Gaouar Olivier Hanotte |
author_sort |
Ahmed S. Al-Jumaili |
title |
The maternal origin of indigenous domestic chicken from the Middle East, the north and the horn of Africa |
title_short |
The maternal origin of indigenous domestic chicken from the Middle East, the north and the horn of Africa |
title_full |
The maternal origin of indigenous domestic chicken from the Middle East, the north and the horn of Africa |
title_fullStr |
The maternal origin of indigenous domestic chicken from the Middle East, the north and the horn of Africa |
title_full_unstemmed |
The maternal origin of indigenous domestic chicken from the Middle East, the north and the horn of Africa |
title_sort |
maternal origin of indigenous domestic chicken from the middle east, the north and the horn of africa |
publisher |
BMC |
series |
BMC Genetics |
issn |
1471-2156 |
publishDate |
2020-03-01 |
description |
Abstract Background Indigenous domestic chicken represents a major source of protein for agricultural communities around the world. In the Middle East and Africa, they are adapted to hot dry and semi-dry areas, in contrast to their wild ancestor, the Red junglefowl, which lives in humid and sub-humid tropical areas. Indigenous populations are declining following increased demand for poultry meat and eggs, favouring the more productive exotic commercial breeds. In this paper, using the D-loop of mitochondrial DNA as a maternally inherited genetic marker, we address the question of the origin and dispersal routes of domestic chicken of the Middle East (Iraq and Saudi Arabia), the northern part of the African continent (Algeria and Libya) and the Horn of Africa (Ethiopia). Results The analysis of the mtDNA D-loop of 706 chicken samples from Iraq (n = 107), Saudi Arabia (n = 185), Algeria (n = 88), Libya (n = 23), Ethiopia (n = 211) and Pakistan (n = 92) show the presence of five haplogroups (A, B, C, D and E), suggesting more than one maternal origin for the studied populations. Haplogroup E, which occurred in 625 samples, was the most frequent in all countries. This haplogroup most likely originates from the Indian subcontinent and probably migrated following a terrestrial route to these different countries. Haplotypes belonging to haplogroup D were present in all countries except Algeria and Libya, it is likely a legacy of the Indian Ocean maritime trading network. Haplogroup A was present in all countries and may be of commercial origin. Haplogroup B was found only in Ethiopia. Haplogroup C was only detected in the South-Western region of Saudi Arabia and in Ethiopia. Conclusion The results support a major influence of the Indian subcontinent on the maternal diversity of the today’s chicken populations examined here. Most of the diversity occurs within rather than between populations. This lack of phylogeographic signal agrees with both ancient and more recent trading networks having shaped the modern-day diversity of indigenous chicken across populations and countries. |
topic |
Domestic chicken Dispersal routes Genetic diversity Middle East Africa |
url |
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12863-020-0830-0 |
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