Powerful detection of polygenic selection and evidence of environmental adaptation in US beef cattle

0301 basic medicine Multifactorial Inheritance Genotype Acclimatization Quantitative Trait Loci Adaptation, Biological QH426-470 Environment Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide 03 medical and health sciences Gene Frequency Genetics Animals Selection, Genetic Alleles 2. Zero hunger 0303 health sciences Models, Genetic Genomics Adaptation, Physiological Biological Evolution Phenotype 13. Climate action Cattle Research Article Genome-Wide Association Study
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1009652 Publication Date: 2021-07-22T17:25:41Z
ABSTRACT
Selection on complex traits can rapidly drive evolution, especially in stressful environments. This polygenic selection does not leave intense sweep signatures on the genome, rather many loci experience small allele frequency shifts, resulting in large cumulative phenotypic changes. Directional selection and local adaptation are changing populations; but, identifying loci underlying polygenic or environmental selection has been difficult. We use genomic data on tens of thousands of cattle from three populations, distributed over time and landscapes, in linear mixed models with novel dependent variables to map signatures of selection on complex traits and local adaptation. We identify 207 genomic loci associated with an animal’s birth date, representing ongoing selection for monogenic and polygenic traits. Additionally, hundreds of additional loci are associated with continuous and discrete environments, providing evidence for historical local adaptation. These candidate loci highlight the nervous system’s possible role in local adaptation. While advanced technologies have increased the rate of directional selection in cattle, it has likely been at the expense of historically generated local adaptation, which is especially problematic in changing climates. When applied to large, diverse cattle datasets, these selection mapping methods provide an insight into how selection on complex traits continually shapes the genome. Further, understanding the genomic loci implicated in adaptation may help us breed more adapted and efficient cattle, and begin to understand the basis for mammalian adaptation, especially in changing climates. These selection mapping approaches help clarify selective forces and loci in evolutionary, model, and agricultural contexts.
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