Animals (Dec 2021)

Variations in <i>HIF-1α</i> Contributed to High Altitude Hypoxia Adaptation via Affected Oxygen Metabolism in Tibetan Sheep

  • Pengfei Zhao,
  • Zhaohua He,
  • Qiming Xi,
  • Hongxian Sun,
  • Yuzhu Luo,
  • Jiqing Wang,
  • Xiu Liu,
  • Zhidong Zhao,
  • Shaobin Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12010058
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 58

Abstract

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The Tibetan sheep is an indigenous species of the Tibetan plateau and has been well adapted to high-altitude hypoxia. In comparison to lowland sheep breeds, the blood gas indicators have changed and the HIFs signaling pathway is activated in Tibetan sheep. These phenotypic and genetic alterations in Tibetan sheep are thought to be an important basis for adaptation to high-altitude hypoxia and variation in genes encoding the subunits that make up HIFs, such as HIF-1α can affect blood gas indicators. In this study, exons 9, 10, 12 of the HIF-1α gene were sequenced to find variations and 3 SNPs were detected, and these 3 SNPs were genotyped by KASP in 341 Hu sheep and 391 Tibetan sheep. In addition, 197 Hu sheep, 160 Tibetan sheep and 12 Gansu alpine merino sheep were used for blood gas indicators analysis. The results showed significant differences between the blood gas indicators of high-altitude breeds (Tibetan sheep and Gansu alpine merino sheep) and low-altitude breeds (Hu sheep), implying that the differences in blood gas indicators are mainly caused by differences in altitude. The haplotype combinations H2H3 and H1H3 were more frequent in the Tibetan sheep population, H2H3 increases O2 carrying capacity by increasing hematocrit and hemoglobin concentrations; H1H3 makes O2 dissociate more readily from oxyhemoglobin by decreasing partial pressure of oxygen and oxygen saturation. These results suggest that variants at the HIF-1α promote the ability of oxygen utilization in Tibetan sheep, which may underpin the survival and reproduction of Tibetan sheep on the Tibetan plateau.

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