Author(s):
Chen, Shanyuan
; Gomes, Rui
; Costa, Vânia
; Santos, Pedro
; Charneca, Rui
; Zhang, Ya-ping
; Liu, Xue-hong
; Wang, Shao-qing
; Bento, Pedro
; Nunes, José
; Buzgó, József
; Varga, Gyula
; Anton, István
; Zsolnai, Attila
; Beja-Pereira, Albano
Date: 2013
Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/9512
Origin: Repositório Científico da Universidade de Évora
Subject(s): wild boar; domestic pig; sngle nucleotide polymorphism; positive selection; balancing selection
Description
The coexistence of wild boars and domestic pigs across Eurasia makes it feasible to conduct comparative genetic or genomic analyses for addressing how genetically
different a domestic species is from its wild ancestor. To test whether there are differences in patterns of genetic variability between wild and domestic pigs at immunity-related genes and to detect outlier loci putatively under selection that may underlie differences in immune responses, here we analyzed 54 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of 19 immunityrelated candidate genes on 11 autosomes in three pairs of wild
boar and domestic pig populations from China, Iberian Peninsula, and Hungary. Our results showed no statistically
significant differences in allele frequency and heterozygosity across SNPs between three pairs of wild and domestic populations.
This observation was more likely due to the widespread and long-lasting gene flow between wild boars and domestic pigs across Eurasia. In addition, we detected eight
coding SNPs from six genes as outliers being under selection consistently by three outlier tests (BayeScan2.1, FDIST2, and
Arlequin3.5). Among four non-synonymous outlier SNPs, one from TLR4 gene was identified as being subject to positive
(diversifying) selection and three each from CD36,IFNW1, and IL1B genes were suggested as under balancing selection. All of these four non-synonymous variants were predicted as being benign by PolyPhen-2. Our results were
supported by other independent lines of evidence for positive selection or balancing selection acting on these four immune
genes (CD36, IFNW1, IL1B, and TLR4). Our study showed an example applying a candidate gene approach to identify functionally
important mutations (i.e., outlier loci) in wild and domestic pigs for subsequent functional experiments.