Abstract

Like most West African Bos taurus, the shorthorn Muturu is under threat of replacement or crossbreeding with zebu. Their populations are now reduced to a few hundred breeding individuals and they are considered endangered. So far, the genetic variation and genetic basis of the trypanotolerant Muturu environmental adaptation have not been assessed. Here, we present genome-wide candidate positive selection signatures in Muturu following within-population iHS and between population Rsb signatures of selection analysis. We compared the results in Muturu with the ones obtained in N’Dama, a West African longhorn trypanotolerant taurine, and in two European taurine (Holstein and Jersey). The results reveal candidate signatures of selection regions in Muturu including genes linked to the innate (e.g., TRIM10, TRIM15, TRIM40, and TRIM26) and the adaptive (e.g., JSP.1, BOLA-DQA2, BOLA-DQA5, BOLA-DRB3, and BLA-DQB) immune responses. The most significant regions are identified on BTA 23 at the bovine major histocompatibility complex (MHC) (iHS analysis) and on BTA 12 at genes including a heat tolerance gene (INTS6) (Rsb analysis). Other candidate selected regions include genes related to growth traits/stature (e.g., GHR and GHRHR), coat color (e.g., MITF and KIT), feed efficiency (e.g., ZRANB3 and MAP3K5) and reproduction (e.g., RFX2, SRY, LAP3, and GPX5). Genes under common signatures of selection regions with N’Dama, including for adaptive immunity and heat tolerance, suggest shared mechanisms of adaptation to environmental challenges for these two West African taurine cattle. Interestingly, out of the 242,910 SNPs identified within the candidate selected regions in Muturu, 917 are missense SNPs (0.4%), with an unequal distribution across 273 genes. Fifteen genes including RBBP8, NID1, TEX15, LAMA3, TRIM40, and OR12D3 comprise 220 missense variants, each between 11 and 32. Our results, while providing insights into the candidate genes under selection in Muturu, are paving the way to the identification of genes and their polymorphisms linked to the unique tropical adaptive traits of the West Africa taurine, including trypanotolerance.

Highlights

  • The Muturu cattle, indigenous to the West African sub-region, is among the least characterized shorthorn humpless Bos taurus, which include the Somba, Baoulé, and Lagune

  • Sequencing of the 10 Muturu samples generated a total of 324.179 Gigabase pairs (Gbp) of clean sequence data after trimming of adapters and low-quality reads

  • Mapping of each sample sequence reads to the B. taurus cattle genome of reference UMD 3.1, yielded a minimum alignment rate of 0.99 and an assembly coverage of 98 percent in all 10 Muturu samples

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Summary

Introduction

The Muturu cattle, indigenous to the West African sub-region, is among the least characterized shorthorn (brachyceros) humpless Bos taurus, which include the Somba, Baoulé, and Lagune. The word Muturu, the Hausa word for humpless, is used for all taurine shorthorns in English-speaking West African countries. The origin of the Muturu is disputed, their ancestors are likely the shorthorn humpless cattle which appeared in ancient Egypt in the second millennium BC, migrating from the center(s) of cattle domestication in the Near East. They were first recorded in West Africa during the first half of the first millennium AD (Epstein, 1971). The past distribution of Muturu ranged across West and Central Africa, in Cameroon, Liberia, Ghana and Nigeria. Muturu is sparsely distributed in the humid forest zone and in a few savannah areas in Nigeria (Rege et al, 1994; Adebambo, 2001; Gwaza and Momoh, 2016)

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