Abstract

Domestication and human selection have formed diverse goat breeds with characteristic phenotypes. This process correlated with the fixation of causative genetic variants controlling breed-specific traits within regions of reduced genetic diversity, so called selection signatures or selective sweeps. Using whole genome sequencing of DNA pools (pool-seq) from 20 genetically diverse modern goat breeds and bezoars, we identified 2,239 putative selection signatures. In two Pakistani goat breeds, Pak Angora and Barbari, we found selection signatures in a region harboring KIT, a gene involved in melanoblast development, migration, and survival. The search for candidate causative variants responsible for these selective sweeps revealed two different copy number variants (CNVs) downstream of KIT that were exclusively present in white Pak Angora and white-spotted Barbari goats. Several Swiss goat breeds selected for specific coat colors showed selection signatures at the ASIP locus encoding the agouti signaling protein. Analysis of these selective sweeps revealed four different CNVs associated with the white or tan (AWt), Swiss markings (Asm), badgerface (Ab), and the newly proposed peacock (Apc) allele. RNA-seq analyses on skin samples from goats with the different CNV alleles suggest that the identified structural variants lead to an altered expression of ASIP between eumelanistic and pheomelanistic body areas. Our study yields novel insights into the genetic control of pigmentation by identifying six functionally relevant CNVs. It illustrates how structural changes of the genome have contributed to phenotypic evolution in domestic goats.

Highlights

  • Goat domestication started around 10,000 years ago in the fertile crescent and is believed to be one of the earliest domestication events of livestock animals [1, 2]

  • Using whole genome sequencing of DNA pools from 20 genetically diverse modern goat breeds and bezoars, we identified 2,239 putative selection signatures

  • In two Pakistani goat breeds, Pak Angora and Barbari, we found selection signatures in a region harboring KIT, a gene involved in melanoblast development, migration, and survival

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Summary

Introduction

Goat domestication started around 10,000 years ago in the fertile crescent and is believed to be one of the earliest domestication events of livestock animals [1, 2]. Goats followed the human migration [3] and played an economically important role for their owners by providing various products like milk, meat or fibers. These economical values were further increased by production-orientated breeding, which led to more than 600 diverse goat breeds at present time [4,5,6]. Artificial selection of domesticated goats resulted in specialized elite breeds for milk, meat or fibers, and in breeds with unique coat color phenotypes [4, 7]. They include solid colored animals of different color, animals with symmetrical color patterns, and animals with white markings, white spotting phenotypes or completely white animals

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