Animal Bioscience (May 2021)

Genetic characteristics of Korean Jeju Black cattle with high density single nucleotide polymorphisms

  • M. Zahangir Alam,
  • Yun-Mi Lee,
  • Hyo-Jung Son,
  • Lauren H. Hanna,
  • David G. Riley,
  • Hideyuki Mannen,
  • Shinji Sasazaki,
  • Se Pill Park,
  • Jong-Joo Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5713/ajas.19.0888
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 34, no. 5
pp. 789 – 800

Abstract

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Objective Conservation and genetic improvement of cattle breeds require information about genetic diversity and population structure of the cattle. In this study, we investigated the genetic diversity and population structure of the three cattle breeds in the Korean peninsula. Methods Jeju Black, Hanwoo, Holstein cattle in Korea, together with six foreign breeds were examined. Genetic diversity within the cattle breeds was analyzed with minor allele frequency (MAF), observed and expected heterozygosity (HO and HE), inbreeding coefficient (FIS) and past effective population size. Molecular variance and population structure between the nine breeds were analyzed using a model-based clustering method. Genetic distances between breeds were evaluated with Nei’s genetic distance and Weir and Cockerham’s FST. Results Our results revealed that Jeju Black cattle had lowest level of heterozygosity (HE = 0.21) among the studied taurine breeds, and an average MAF of 0.16. The level of inbreeding was −0.076 for Jeju Black, while −0.018 to −0.118 for the other breeds. Principle component analysis and neighbor-joining tree showed a clear separation of Jeju Black cattle from other local (Hanwoo and Japanese cattle) and taurine/indicine cattle breeds in evolutionary process, and a distinct pattern of admixture of Jeju Black cattle having no clustering with other studied populations. The FST value between Jeju Black cattle and Hanwoo was 0.106, which was lowest across the pair of breeds ranging from 0.161 to 0.274, indicating some degree of genetic closeness of Jeju Black cattle with Hanwoo. The past effective population size of Jeju Black cattle was very small, i.e. 38 in 13 generation ago, whereas 209 for Hanwoo. Conclusion This study indicates genetic uniqueness of Jeju Black cattle. However, a small effective population size of Jeju Black cattle indicates the requirement for an implementation of a sustainable breeding policy to increase the population for genetic improvement and future conservation.

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