Published March 20, 2022 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Genome-wide analysis identified candidate variants and genes associated with heat stress adaptation in Egyptian sheep breeds

  • 1. Animal Production Research Institute (APRI) Giza, Egypt
  • 2. Agricultural Genetic Engineering Research Institute (AGERI), Agriculture Research Center (ARC) Giza, Egypt
  • 3. Mohammed VI Polytechnic University Ben Guerir, Morocco
  • 4. International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas (ICARDA) Aleppo, Syria

Description

The current study was conducted from 2009 to 2019 in three hot and dry agroecological zones in Egypt: Western Desert coastal zone, New Valley desert oasis, and hot-dry Upper Egypt. Within these zones, three local sheep breeds were studied: Barki (83 ewes), Wahati (55 ewes) and Saidi (68 ewes). During the study period, the animals exercised under natural heat stress (simulating summer grazing on poor pasture). Meteorological and physiological parameters were measured and recorded. The heat tolerance index of the animals was calculated to identify animals with high and low heat tolerance based on the animals' response to the five main physiological parameters (scale from 0 to 5). DNA samples were extracted for genomic analysis. The genetic diversity measurements showed a significant influence of breed and location on the populations. The influence of breed is more significant than that of location. The inbreeding analysis shows that the desert breeds (Wahati and Barki) have lower values than the urban breed (Saidi). The high rate of sub-clustering indicates the process of sub-population through inbreeding pressure. Wahati and Barki are very distinct breeds with strong identification, while Saidi breed has crosses with other breeds. The most significant SNPs associated with heat tolerance were found in MYO5A, PRKG1, GSTCD, and RTN1 genes (P < 0.0001). MYO5A had an effect of 0.74 on the trait heat tolerance in the studied population. It produces a protein that is widely distributed in the melanin-producing neural crest of the skin. Genetic association between genetic and phenotypic variations showed that OAR1 18300122.1, located in ST3GAL3, had the greatest positive effect on heat tolerance. GWAS analysis identified SNPs associated with heat tolerance in the PLCB1, STEAP3, KSR2, UNC13C , PEBP4, and GPAT2 genes.

Files

Files (33.3 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:e0b305f25e47fb4456880fccfe8eff0f
33.3 MB Download
md5:6009033d3ee9392b74b517fe186f7a86
2.9 kB Download