Revealing the History of Sheep Domestication Using Retrovirus Integrations

Bernardo Chessa(University of Sassari), Filipe Pereira(Universidade do Porto), Frédérick Arnaud(University of Glasgow), António Amorim(Universidade do Porto), F. Goyache(Centro Regional de Selección y Reproducción Animal), Ingrid Mainland(University of Bradford), Rowland R. Kao(University of Glasgow), Josephine M. Pemberton(University of Edinburgh), Dario Beraldi(University of Edinburgh), M.J. Stear(University of Glasgow), Alberto Alberti(University of Sassari), Marco Pittau(University of Sassari), L. Iannuzzi(Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics), Mohammad Hossein Banabazi(Animal Science Research Institute), Rudovick Kazwala(Sokoine University of Agriculture), Yaping Zhang(Kunming Institute of Zoology), J. J. Arranz(Universidad de León), Bahy A. Ali(City of Scientific Research and Technological Applications), Zhiliang Wang(China Animal Health and Epidemiology Center), Metehan Uzun(Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart Üniversitesi), Michel Dione(International Trypanotolerance Centre), Ingrid Olsaker(Norwegian University of Life Sciences), Lars‐Erik Holm(Aarhus University), Urmas Saarma(University of Tartu), Sohail Ahmad(The University of Agriculture, Peshawar), Н. С. Марзанов(Federal Scientific Center for Animal Husbandry named after Academician L.K. Ernst), Emma Eythórsdóttir(Agricultural University of Iceland), Martin J. Holland(University of London), Paolo Ajmone‐Marsan(Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore), Michael W. Bruford(Cardiff University), Juha Kantanen(Agrifood Research Finland), Thomas E. Spencer(Texas A&M University), Massimo Palmarini(University of Glasgow)
Science
April 23, 2009
Cited by 579Open Access
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Abstract

The domestication of livestock represented a crucial step in human history. By using endogenous retroviruses as genetic markers, we found that sheep differentiated on the basis of their "retrotype" and morphological traits dispersed across Eurasia and Africa via separate migratory episodes. Relicts of the first migrations include the Mouflon, as well as breeds previously recognized as "primitive" on the basis of their morphology, such as the Orkney, Soay, and the Nordic short-tailed sheep now confined to the periphery of northwest Europe. A later migratory episode, involving sheep with improved production traits, shaped the great majority of present-day breeds. The ability to differentiate genetically primitive sheep from more modern breeds provides valuable insights into the history of sheep domestication.


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