Authors
Laercio R Porto-Neto, Tad S Sonstegard, George E Liu, Derek M Bickhart, Marcos VB Da Silva, Marco A Machado, Yuri T Utsunomiya, Jose F Garcia, Cedric Gondro, Curtis P Van Tassell
Publication date
2013/12
Journal
BMC genomics
Volume
14
Pages
1-12
Publisher
BioMed Central
Description
Background
Natural selection has molded evolution across all taxa. At an arguable date of around 330,000 years ago there were already at least two different types of cattle that became ancestors of nearly all modern cattle, the Bos taurus taurus more adapted to temperate climates and the tropically adapted Bos taurus indicus. After domestication, human selection exponentially intensified these differences. To better understand the genetic differences between these subspecies and detect genomic regions potentially under divergent selection, animals from the International Bovine HapMap Experiment were genotyped for over 770,000 SNP across the genome and compared using smoothed FST. The taurine sample was represented by ten breeds and the contrasting zebu cohort by three breeds.
Results
Each cattle group evidenced similar numbers of …
Total citations
201420152016201720182019202020212022202320241021715171621141484
Scholar articles