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The footprint of recent and strong demographic decline in the genomes of Mangalitza pigs
Institution:1. Institute of Life Sciences, University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine, Calea M?n??tur 3-5, 400372 Cluj-Napoca, Romania;2. Department of Animal Genetics, Centre for Research in Agricultural Genomics (CRAG), CSIC-IRTA-UAB-UB, Campus de la Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 08193 Bellaterra, Spain;3. CAPES Foundation, Ministry of Education of Brazil, 7004020 Brasilia D. F., Brazil;4. Departament de Ciència Animal i dels Aliments, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 08193 Bellaterra, Spain;5. Szent István University, Páter Károly u. 1., 2100 Gödöll?, Hungary;6. NAIK-Research Institute for Animal Breeding, Nutrition and Food Science, Gesztenyes u. 1., 2053 Herceghalom, Hungary;7. Centro de Investigacao em Biodiversidade e Recursos Geneticos, Universidade do Porto (CIBIO-UP), Rua Padre Armando Quintas 7, 4485-661 Vairao, Portugal
Abstract:The Mangalitza pig breed has suffered strong population reductions due to competition with more productive cosmopolitan breeds. In the current work, we aimed to investigate the effects of this sustained demographic recession on the genomic diversity of Mangalitza pigs. By using the Porcine Single Nucleotid Polymorphism BeadChip, we have characterized the genome-wide diversity of 350 individuals including 45 Red Mangalitza (number of samples; n=20 from Hungary and n=25 from Romania), 37 Blond Mangalitza, 26 Swallow-belly Mangalitza, 48 Blond Mangalitza × Duroc crossbreds, 5 Bazna swine, 143 pigs from the Hampshire, Duroc, Landrace, Large White and Pietrain breeds and 46 wild boars from Romania (n=18) and Hungary (n=28). Performance of a multidimensional scaling plot showed that Landrace, Large White and Pietrain pigs clustered independently from Mangalitza pigs and Romanian and Hungarian wild boars. The number and total length of ROH (runs of homozygosity), as well as FROH coefficients (proportion of the autosomal genome covered ROH) did not show major differences between Mangalitza pigs and other wild and domestic pig populations. However, Romanian and Hungarian Red Mangalitza pigs displayed an increased frequency of very long ROH (>30 Mb) when compared with other porcine breeds. These results indicate that Red Mangalitza pigs underwent recent and strong inbreeding probably as a consequence of severe reductions in census size.
Keywords:polymorphisms  population  structure  admixture  homozygosity
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