Abstract

We constructed a 400K WG tiling oligoarray for the horse and applied it for the discovery of copy number variations (CNVs) in 38 normal horses of 16 diverse breeds, and the Przewalski horse. Probes on the array represented 18,763 autosomal and X-linked genes, and intergenic, sub-telomeric and chrY sequences. We identified 258 CNV regions (CNVRs) across all autosomes, chrX and chrUn, but not in chrY. CNVs comprised 1.3% of the horse genome with chr12 being most enriched. American Miniature horses had the highest and American Quarter Horses the lowest number of CNVs in relation to Thoroughbred reference. The Przewalski horse was similar to native ponies and draft breeds. The majority of CNVRs involved genes, while 20% were located in intergenic regions. Similar to previous studies in horses and other mammals, molecular functions of CNV-associated genes were predominantly in sensory perception, immunity and reproduction. The findings were integrated with previous studies to generate a composite genome-wide dataset of 1476 CNVRs. Of these, 301 CNVRs were shared between studies, while 1174 were novel and require further validation. Integrated data revealed that to date, 41 out of over 400 breeds of the domestic horse have been analyzed for CNVs, of which 11 new breeds were added in this study. Finally, the composite CNV dataset was applied in a pilot study for the discovery of CNVs in 6 horses with XY disorders of sexual development. A homozygous deletion involving AKR1C gene cluster in chr29 in two affected horses was considered possibly causative because of the known role of AKR1C genes in testicular androgen synthesis and sexual development. While the findings improve and integrate the knowledge of CNVs in horses, they also show that for effective discovery of variants of biomedical importance, more breeds and individuals need to be analyzed using comparable methodological approaches.

Highlights

  • The significance of gene duplication in long-term evolutionary changes was already recognized over 40 years ago by Susumu Ohno [1]

  • Our analysis shows that copy number variations (CNVs) research in horses needs further improvement because the current data are based on 10% of horse breeds and that most CNV regions (CNVRs) are studyspecific and require validation

  • Before using the array for CNV discovery in horses, the platform was tested for performance quality

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Summary

Introduction

The significance of gene duplication in long-term evolutionary changes was already recognized over 40 years ago by Susumu Ohno [1]. It is well established that CNVs are a common feature of vertebrate genomes. They are DNA sequence variants from at least 50 base-pairs (bp) to over several megabase-pairs (Mb) in size that are involved in deletions, insertions, duplications and translocations, causing structural differences between genomes [11,12]. In terms of the total number of DNA base-pairs, CNVs are responsible for more heritable sequence differences (0.5–1%) between individuals than SNPs (0.1%) [11,12,13]. CNVs have been associated with common complex and polygenic disorders in humans affecting a broad range of biological processes, such as immune response, autoimmunity and inflammation [3,16,17]; musculoskeletal [18,19] and cardiovascular systems [20,21]; neurodevelopment, cognition and behavior [22,23], and sexual development and reproduction [24,25,26,27,28]

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