Abstract

In this study, the intra- and inter-population level of genetic diversity of 26 transboundary and local sheep breeds reared in the Czech Republic was analysed. A total of 14,999 animals genotyped for 11 microsatellite markers were included to describe the gene pool of the breeds. The level of genetic diversity was derived from the proportion of heterozygous animals among and within breeds. The average polymorphic information content (0.745) and Shannon’s index (1.361) showed a high genetic variability of the applied set of genetic markers. The average observed heterozygosity (0.683 ± 0.009), as well as FIS index (-0.025 ± 0.004), pointed to a sufficient proportion of heterozygotes concerning the loss of genetic diversity. The deficit of heterozygotes was most evident in Cameroon sheep (FIS = 0.036). The Nei's genetic distances and Wright's FST indexes showed that the analysed breeds are genetically differentiated to separate clusters with Cameroon sheep as the most genetically distant breed. Individual variation accounted for 83.2 % of total diversity conserved across breeds, whereas 16.8 % of genetic similarity resulted from the inter-population reduction in heterozygosity. Keywords: microsatellite analysis, genetic diversity, sheep, transboundary and local breed References Bravo, S. et al. (2019). Genetic diversity and phylogenetic relationship among araucana creole sheep and Spanish sheep breeds. Small Ruminant Research, 172, 23–30. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.smallrumres.2019.01.007 Chessa, B. et al. (2009). Revealing the history of sheep domestication using retrovirus integrations. Science, 324(5926), 532–536. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1170587 Faigl, V. et al. (2012). Artificial insemination of small ruminants - A review. 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Highlights

  • Ancient European sheep population was created through two main immigration events from Southwest Asia during the 4th and 5th millennium B.P

  • This study aimed to investigate the genetic diversity through microsatellite (STR) markers analysis of sheep breeds in the Czech Republic

  • 26 sheep breeds reared in the Czech Republic were investigated through STR markers analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Ancient European sheep population was created through two main immigration events from Southwest Asia during the 4th and 5th millennium B.P. During the first one, primitive breeds came in, which were pushed out and crossed by breeds specialised on the secondary production in the second wave (Chessa et al, 2009). Along with the development of society and agriculture, more productive sheep have been bred and spread during the European colonisation over the world (Taberlet et al, 2008). A great turnout of breeding practices occurred, when bigger selection affords started unifying many populations into breed standards (Taberlet et al, 2008). This selection pressure is even enhanced by modern reproductive biotechnologies (Taberlet et al, 2008). Higher sheep products demand initiates breeding of high-yielding sheep breeds, and their commercial use all over the world threatens local genetic sources (FAO, 2007)

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