Whole-genome resequencing reveals world-wide ancestry and adaptive introgression events of domesticated cattle in East Asia

Ningbo Chen(Northwest A&F University), Yudong Cai(Northwest A&F University), Qiuming Chen(Northwest A&F University), Ran Li(Northwest A&F University), Kun Wang(Northwestern Polytechnical University), Yongzhen Huang(Northwest A&F University), Songmei Hu(Institute of Archaeology), Shisheng Huang(Northwest A&F University), Hucai Zhang(Yunnan University), Zhuqing Zheng(Northwest A&F University), Weining Song(Northwest A&F University), Zhijie Ma(Qinghai University), Yun Ma(Ningxia University), Ruihua Dang(Northwest A&F University), Zijing Zhang(Henan Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Lei Xu(Anhui Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Yutang Jia(Anhui Academy of Agricultural Sciences), Shanzhai Liu(National Beef Cattle Industrial Technology System), Xiangpeng Yue(Lanzhou University), Weidong Deng(Yunnan Agricultural University), Xiaoming Zhang(Kunming Institute of Zoology), Zhouyong Sun(Institute of Archaeology), Xianyong Lan(Northwest A&F University), Jianlin Han(International Livestock Research Institute), Hong Chen(Northwest A&F University), Daniel G. Bradley(Trinity College Dublin), Yu Jiang(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Chuzhao Lei(North West Agriculture and Forestry University)
Nature Communications
June 8, 2018
Cited by 450Open Access
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Abstract

Cattle domestication and the complex histories of East Asian cattle breeds warrant further investigation. Through analysing the genomes of 49 modern breeds and eight East Asian ancient samples, worldwide cattle are consistently classified into five continental groups based on Y-chromosome haplotypes and autosomal variants. We find that East Asian cattle populations are mainly composed of three distinct ancestries, including an earlier East Asian taurine ancestry that reached China at least ~3.9 kya, a later introduced Eurasian taurine ancestry, and a novel Chinese indicine ancestry that diverged from Indian indicine approximately 36.6-49.6 kya. We also report historic introgression events that helped domestic cattle from southern China and the Tibetan Plateau achieve rapid adaptation by acquiring ~2.93% and ~1.22% of their genomes from banteng and yak, respectively. Our findings provide new insights into the evolutionary history of cattle and the importance of introgression in adaptation of cattle to new environmental challenges in East Asia.


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