Department of Computational Medicine & Bioinformatics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Department of Human Genetics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Genes (Basel). 2024 Sep 5;15(9):1168. doi: 10.3390/genes15091168.
Canines are an important model system for genetics and evolution. Recent advances in sequencing technologies have enabled the creation of large databases of genetic variation in canines, but analyses of allele sharing among canine groups have been limited. We applied GeoVar, an approach originally developed to study the sharing of single nucleotide polymorphisms across human populations, to assess the sharing of genetic variation among groups of wolves, village dogs, and breed dogs. Our analysis shows that wolves differ from each other at an average of approximately 2.3 million sites while dogs from the same breed differ at nearly 1 million sites. We found that 22% of the variants are common across wolves, village dogs, and breed dogs, that ~16% of variable sites are common across breed dogs, and that nearly half of the differences between two dogs of different breeds are due to sites that are common in all clades. These analyses represent a succinct summary of allele sharing across canines and illustrate the effects of canine history on the apportionment of genetic variation.
犬类是遗传学和进化的重要模式生物。最近测序技术的进步使得能够创建大型犬类遗传变异数据库,但对犬类群体间等位基因共享的分析却受到限制。我们应用了 GeoVar,这是一种最初用于研究人类群体中单核苷酸多态性共享的方法,来评估狼、乡村犬和犬种犬群体间遗传变异的共享情况。我们的分析表明,狼之间在大约 230 万个位点上存在差异,而同一犬种的狗在近 100 万个位点上存在差异。我们发现,22%的变异在狼、乡村犬和犬种犬中是共同的,大约 16%的变异位点在犬种犬中是共同的,而且不同犬种的两只狗之间的近一半差异是由于所有分支中都存在的位点造成的。这些分析简洁地总结了犬类之间的等位基因共享情况,并说明了犬类历史对遗传变异分配的影响。