Regions of homozygosity in the porcine genome: consequence of demography and the recombination landscape.

Inbreeding has long been recognized as a primary cause of fitness reduction in both wild and domesticated populations. Consanguineous matings cause inheritance of haplotypes that are identical by descent (IBD) and result in homozygous stretches along the genome of the offspring. Size and position of...

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Main Authors: Mirte Bosse, Hendrik-Jan Megens, Ole Madsen, Yogesh Paudel, Laurent A F Frantz, Lawrence B Schook, Richard P M A Crooijmans, Martien A M Groenen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3510040?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-0bc1df5ec5244155b573f08356c28e122020-11-25T01:19:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042012-01-01811e100310010.1371/journal.pgen.1003100Regions of homozygosity in the porcine genome: consequence of demography and the recombination landscape.Mirte BosseHendrik-Jan MegensOle MadsenYogesh PaudelLaurent A F FrantzLawrence B SchookRichard P M A CrooijmansMartien A M GroenenInbreeding has long been recognized as a primary cause of fitness reduction in both wild and domesticated populations. Consanguineous matings cause inheritance of haplotypes that are identical by descent (IBD) and result in homozygous stretches along the genome of the offspring. Size and position of regions of homozygosity (ROHs) are expected to correlate with genomic features such as GC content and recombination rate, but also direction of selection. Thus, ROHs should be non-randomly distributed across the genome. Therefore, demographic history may not fully predict the effects of inbreeding. The porcine genome has a relatively heterogeneous distribution of recombination rate, making Sus scrofa an excellent model to study the influence of both recombination landscape and demography on genomic variation. This study utilizes next-generation sequencing data for the analysis of genomic ROH patterns, using a comparative sliding window approach. We present an in-depth study of genomic variation based on three different parameters: nucleotide diversity outside ROHs, the number of ROHs in the genome, and the average ROH size. We identified an abundance of ROHs in all genomes of multiple pigs from commercial breeds and wild populations from Eurasia. Size and number of ROHs are in agreement with known demography of the populations, with population bottlenecks highly increasing ROH occurrence. Nucleotide diversity outside ROHs is high in populations derived from a large ancient population, regardless of current population size. In addition, we show an unequal genomic ROH distribution, with strong correlations of ROH size and abundance with recombination rate and GC content. Global gene content does not correlate with ROH frequency, but some ROH hotspots do contain positive selected genes in commercial lines and wild populations. This study highlights the importance of the influence of demography and recombination on homozygosity in the genome to understand the effects of inbreeding.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3510040?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mirte Bosse
Hendrik-Jan Megens
Ole Madsen
Yogesh Paudel
Laurent A F Frantz
Lawrence B Schook
Richard P M A Crooijmans
Martien A M Groenen
spellingShingle Mirte Bosse
Hendrik-Jan Megens
Ole Madsen
Yogesh Paudel
Laurent A F Frantz
Lawrence B Schook
Richard P M A Crooijmans
Martien A M Groenen
Regions of homozygosity in the porcine genome: consequence of demography and the recombination landscape.
PLoS Genetics
author_facet Mirte Bosse
Hendrik-Jan Megens
Ole Madsen
Yogesh Paudel
Laurent A F Frantz
Lawrence B Schook
Richard P M A Crooijmans
Martien A M Groenen
author_sort Mirte Bosse
title Regions of homozygosity in the porcine genome: consequence of demography and the recombination landscape.
title_short Regions of homozygosity in the porcine genome: consequence of demography and the recombination landscape.
title_full Regions of homozygosity in the porcine genome: consequence of demography and the recombination landscape.
title_fullStr Regions of homozygosity in the porcine genome: consequence of demography and the recombination landscape.
title_full_unstemmed Regions of homozygosity in the porcine genome: consequence of demography and the recombination landscape.
title_sort regions of homozygosity in the porcine genome: consequence of demography and the recombination landscape.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Genetics
issn 1553-7390
1553-7404
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Inbreeding has long been recognized as a primary cause of fitness reduction in both wild and domesticated populations. Consanguineous matings cause inheritance of haplotypes that are identical by descent (IBD) and result in homozygous stretches along the genome of the offspring. Size and position of regions of homozygosity (ROHs) are expected to correlate with genomic features such as GC content and recombination rate, but also direction of selection. Thus, ROHs should be non-randomly distributed across the genome. Therefore, demographic history may not fully predict the effects of inbreeding. The porcine genome has a relatively heterogeneous distribution of recombination rate, making Sus scrofa an excellent model to study the influence of both recombination landscape and demography on genomic variation. This study utilizes next-generation sequencing data for the analysis of genomic ROH patterns, using a comparative sliding window approach. We present an in-depth study of genomic variation based on three different parameters: nucleotide diversity outside ROHs, the number of ROHs in the genome, and the average ROH size. We identified an abundance of ROHs in all genomes of multiple pigs from commercial breeds and wild populations from Eurasia. Size and number of ROHs are in agreement with known demography of the populations, with population bottlenecks highly increasing ROH occurrence. Nucleotide diversity outside ROHs is high in populations derived from a large ancient population, regardless of current population size. In addition, we show an unequal genomic ROH distribution, with strong correlations of ROH size and abundance with recombination rate and GC content. Global gene content does not correlate with ROH frequency, but some ROH hotspots do contain positive selected genes in commercial lines and wild populations. This study highlights the importance of the influence of demography and recombination on homozygosity in the genome to understand the effects of inbreeding.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3510040?pdf=render
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