RESUMEN
The characterization of casein polymorphism is an essential step in order to understand the genetic basis of milk quality in dairy ruminants. In this work, we report the identification of a regulatory mutation at the buffalo αs1-casein (CSN1S1) gene that alters the normal processing of the primary transcript. Sequencing of CSN1S1 cDNA from individuals harbouring this new variant revealed that its most distinctive feature is the loss of exon 6 that encodes eight amino acids between positions 35-42 of mature protein. In an effort to map the causal mutation, we sequenced a genomic region spanning exons 5-7 of the buffalo CSN1S1 gene. This experiment allowed us to establish that exon 6-skipping is produced by a G to C substitution at the first position of intron 6 that inactivates the donor splice site. This mutation can be typed by PCR-RFLP by using either TaaI or Bpu10I diagnostic restriction enzymes, and it has a frequency of 0.18 in Romanian buffaloes. This exon skipping phenomenon is the first one described in buffalo CSN1S1 locus.
Asunto(s)
Empalme Alternativo , Búfalos/genética , Caseínas/genética , Exones , Intrones , Mutación , Secuencias Reguladoras de Ácidos Nucleicos , Animales , Secuencia de Bases , ADN Complementario/genética , Frecuencia de los Genes , Genotipo , Datos de Secuencia MolecularRESUMEN
The lack of a Near Eastern genetic signature in modern European porcine breeds indicates that, although domestic pigs from the Fertile Crescent entered Europe during the Neolithic, they were completely replaced by their European counterparts in a short window of time. Whilst the absence of such genetic signature has been convincingly demonstrated at the mitochondrial level, variation at the autosomal genomes of European and Near Eastern Sus scrofa has not been compared yet. Herewith, we have explored the genetic relationships among 43 wild boar from Europe (Nâ=â21), Near East (Nâ=â19) and Korea (Nâ=â3), and 40 Iberian (Nâ=â16), Canarian (Nâ=â4) and Mangalitza (Nâ=â20) pigs by using a high throughput SNP genotyping platform. After data filtering, 37,167 autosomal SNPs were used to perform population genetics analyses. A multidimensional scaling plot based on genome-wide identity-by-state pairwise distances inferred with PLINK showed that Near Eastern and European wild boar populations are genetically differentiated. Maximum likelihood trees built with TreeMix supported this conclusion i.e. an early population split between Near Eastern and European Sus scrofa was observed. Moreover, analysis of the data with Structure evidenced that the sampled Iberian, Canarian and Mangalitza pigs did not carry any autosomal signature compatible with a Near Eastern ancestry, a finding that agrees well with previous mitochondrial studies.