Bidirectional Selection for Body Weight on Standing Genetic Variation in a Chicken Model

Experimental populations of model organisms provide valuable opportunities to unravel the genomic impact of selection in a controlled system. The Virginia body weight chicken lines represent a unique resource to investigate signatures of selection in a system where long-term, single-trait, bidirecti...

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Main Authors: Mette Lillie, Christa F. Honaker, Paul B. Siegel, Örjan Carlborg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2019-04-01
Series:G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://g3journal.org/lookup/doi/10.1534/g3.119.400038
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spelling doaj-34b277eaee4d4d33b2f9b78efba50ed62021-07-02T05:22:18ZengOxford University PressG3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics2160-18362019-04-01941165117310.1534/g3.119.40003818Bidirectional Selection for Body Weight on Standing Genetic Variation in a Chicken ModelMette LillieChrista F. HonakerPaul B. SiegelÖrjan CarlborgExperimental populations of model organisms provide valuable opportunities to unravel the genomic impact of selection in a controlled system. The Virginia body weight chicken lines represent a unique resource to investigate signatures of selection in a system where long-term, single-trait, bidirectional selection has been carried out for more than 60 generations. At 55 generations of divergent selection, earlier analyses of pooled genome resequencing data from these lines revealed that 14.2% of the genome showed extreme differentiation between the selected lines, contained within 395 genomic regions. Here, we report more detailed analyses of these data exploring the regions displaying within- and between-line genomic signatures of the bidirectional selection applied in these lines. Despite the strict selection regime for opposite extremes in body weight, this did not result in opposite genomic signatures between the lines. The lines often displayed a duality of the sweep signatures, where an extended region of homozygosity in one line, in contrast to mosaic pattern of heterozygosity in the other line. These haplotype mosaics consisted of short, distinct haploblocks of variable between-line divergence, likely the results of a complex demographic history involving bottlenecks, introgressions and moderate inbreeding. We demonstrate this using the example of complex haplotype mosaicism in the growth1 QTL. These mosaics represent the standing genetic variation available at the onset of selection in the founder population. Selection on standing genetic variation can thus result in different signatures depending on the intensity and direction of selection.http://g3journal.org/lookup/doi/10.1534/g3.119.400038ChickenWhite Plymouth Rockselective sweepsbody weightquantitative trait
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mette Lillie
Christa F. Honaker
Paul B. Siegel
Örjan Carlborg
spellingShingle Mette Lillie
Christa F. Honaker
Paul B. Siegel
Örjan Carlborg
Bidirectional Selection for Body Weight on Standing Genetic Variation in a Chicken Model
G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics
Chicken
White Plymouth Rock
selective sweeps
body weight
quantitative trait
author_facet Mette Lillie
Christa F. Honaker
Paul B. Siegel
Örjan Carlborg
author_sort Mette Lillie
title Bidirectional Selection for Body Weight on Standing Genetic Variation in a Chicken Model
title_short Bidirectional Selection for Body Weight on Standing Genetic Variation in a Chicken Model
title_full Bidirectional Selection for Body Weight on Standing Genetic Variation in a Chicken Model
title_fullStr Bidirectional Selection for Body Weight on Standing Genetic Variation in a Chicken Model
title_full_unstemmed Bidirectional Selection for Body Weight on Standing Genetic Variation in a Chicken Model
title_sort bidirectional selection for body weight on standing genetic variation in a chicken model
publisher Oxford University Press
series G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics
issn 2160-1836
publishDate 2019-04-01
description Experimental populations of model organisms provide valuable opportunities to unravel the genomic impact of selection in a controlled system. The Virginia body weight chicken lines represent a unique resource to investigate signatures of selection in a system where long-term, single-trait, bidirectional selection has been carried out for more than 60 generations. At 55 generations of divergent selection, earlier analyses of pooled genome resequencing data from these lines revealed that 14.2% of the genome showed extreme differentiation between the selected lines, contained within 395 genomic regions. Here, we report more detailed analyses of these data exploring the regions displaying within- and between-line genomic signatures of the bidirectional selection applied in these lines. Despite the strict selection regime for opposite extremes in body weight, this did not result in opposite genomic signatures between the lines. The lines often displayed a duality of the sweep signatures, where an extended region of homozygosity in one line, in contrast to mosaic pattern of heterozygosity in the other line. These haplotype mosaics consisted of short, distinct haploblocks of variable between-line divergence, likely the results of a complex demographic history involving bottlenecks, introgressions and moderate inbreeding. We demonstrate this using the example of complex haplotype mosaicism in the growth1 QTL. These mosaics represent the standing genetic variation available at the onset of selection in the founder population. Selection on standing genetic variation can thus result in different signatures depending on the intensity and direction of selection.
topic Chicken
White Plymouth Rock
selective sweeps
body weight
quantitative trait
url http://g3journal.org/lookup/doi/10.1534/g3.119.400038
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AT orjancarlborg bidirectionalselectionforbodyweightonstandinggeneticvariationinachickenmodel
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