Identification of an ancestral haplotype in the mitochondrial phylogeny of the ovine haplogroup B

Background European mouflon (Ovis orientalis musimon) has been reintroduced in mainland Europe since the 18th-century sourcing from the Sardinian and Corsican autochthonous mouflon populations. The European mouflon is currently considered the feral descendent of the Asian mouflon (O. orientalis), an...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Paolo Mereu, Monica Pirastru, Mario Barbato, Valentina Satta, Eleftherios Hadjisterkotis, Laura Manca, Salvatore Naitana, Giovanni G. Leoni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2019-10-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/7895.pdf
id doaj-4ed1903a988b4918bf7f069634fd9d44
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4ed1903a988b4918bf7f069634fd9d442020-11-25T01:07:49ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592019-10-017e789510.7717/peerj.7895Identification of an ancestral haplotype in the mitochondrial phylogeny of the ovine haplogroup BPaolo Mereu0Monica Pirastru1Mario Barbato2Valentina Satta3Eleftherios Hadjisterkotis4Laura Manca5Salvatore Naitana6Giovanni G. Leoni7Department of Biomedical Sciences, Sassari University, Sassari, ItalyDepartment of Biomedical Sciences, Sassari University, Sassari, ItalyDepartment of Animal Sciences, Nutrition and Food, La Cattolica University, Piacenza, ItalyDepartment of Veterinary Medicine, Sassari University, Sassari, ItalyMinistry of Agriculture, Rural Development and Environment, Nicosia, CyprusDepartment of Biomedical Sciences, Sassari University, Sassari, ItalyDepartment of Veterinary Medicine, Sassari University, Sassari, ItalyDepartment of Veterinary Medicine, Sassari University, Sassari, ItalyBackground European mouflon (Ovis orientalis musimon) has been reintroduced in mainland Europe since the 18th-century sourcing from the Sardinian and Corsican autochthonous mouflon populations. The European mouflon is currently considered the feral descendent of the Asian mouflon (O. orientalis), and the result of first wave of sheep domestication occurred 11,000 years ago in the Fertile Crescent, and brought to Corsica and Sardinia ca. 6,000 years ago, where they still live as autochthonous populations. However, this phylogeny is based on mitogenome sequences of European mouflon individuals exclusively. Methods We sequenced the first complete mtDNA of the long-time isolated Sardinian mouflon and compared it with several ovine homologous sequences, including mouflon from mainland Europe and samples representative of the five known mitochondrial domestic sheep haplogroups. We applied Bayesian inference, Maximum Likelihood and Integer Neighbour-Joining network methods and provided a robust, fully-resolved phylogeny with strong statistical support for all nodes. Results We identified an early split (110,000 years ago) of the Sardinian mouflon haplotype from both sheep and mainland European mouflon belonging to haplogroup B, the latter two sharing a more recent common ancestor (80,000 years ago). Further, the Sardinian mouflon sequence we generated had the largest genetic distance from domestic sheep haplogroups (0.0136 ± 0.004) among mouflon species. Our results suggest the Sardinian mouflon haplotype as the most ancestral in the HPG-B lineage, hence partially redrawing the known phylogeny of the genus Ovis.https://peerj.com/articles/7895.pdfMolecular datingTaxonomyMitochondrial haplogroupsMitogenomeOvisPhilogeny
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paolo Mereu
Monica Pirastru
Mario Barbato
Valentina Satta
Eleftherios Hadjisterkotis
Laura Manca
Salvatore Naitana
Giovanni G. Leoni
spellingShingle Paolo Mereu
Monica Pirastru
Mario Barbato
Valentina Satta
Eleftherios Hadjisterkotis
Laura Manca
Salvatore Naitana
Giovanni G. Leoni
Identification of an ancestral haplotype in the mitochondrial phylogeny of the ovine haplogroup B
PeerJ
Molecular dating
Taxonomy
Mitochondrial haplogroups
Mitogenome
Ovis
Philogeny
author_facet Paolo Mereu
Monica Pirastru
Mario Barbato
Valentina Satta
Eleftherios Hadjisterkotis
Laura Manca
Salvatore Naitana
Giovanni G. Leoni
author_sort Paolo Mereu
title Identification of an ancestral haplotype in the mitochondrial phylogeny of the ovine haplogroup B
title_short Identification of an ancestral haplotype in the mitochondrial phylogeny of the ovine haplogroup B
title_full Identification of an ancestral haplotype in the mitochondrial phylogeny of the ovine haplogroup B
title_fullStr Identification of an ancestral haplotype in the mitochondrial phylogeny of the ovine haplogroup B
title_full_unstemmed Identification of an ancestral haplotype in the mitochondrial phylogeny of the ovine haplogroup B
title_sort identification of an ancestral haplotype in the mitochondrial phylogeny of the ovine haplogroup b
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Background European mouflon (Ovis orientalis musimon) has been reintroduced in mainland Europe since the 18th-century sourcing from the Sardinian and Corsican autochthonous mouflon populations. The European mouflon is currently considered the feral descendent of the Asian mouflon (O. orientalis), and the result of first wave of sheep domestication occurred 11,000 years ago in the Fertile Crescent, and brought to Corsica and Sardinia ca. 6,000 years ago, where they still live as autochthonous populations. However, this phylogeny is based on mitogenome sequences of European mouflon individuals exclusively. Methods We sequenced the first complete mtDNA of the long-time isolated Sardinian mouflon and compared it with several ovine homologous sequences, including mouflon from mainland Europe and samples representative of the five known mitochondrial domestic sheep haplogroups. We applied Bayesian inference, Maximum Likelihood and Integer Neighbour-Joining network methods and provided a robust, fully-resolved phylogeny with strong statistical support for all nodes. Results We identified an early split (110,000 years ago) of the Sardinian mouflon haplotype from both sheep and mainland European mouflon belonging to haplogroup B, the latter two sharing a more recent common ancestor (80,000 years ago). Further, the Sardinian mouflon sequence we generated had the largest genetic distance from domestic sheep haplogroups (0.0136 ± 0.004) among mouflon species. Our results suggest the Sardinian mouflon haplotype as the most ancestral in the HPG-B lineage, hence partially redrawing the known phylogeny of the genus Ovis.
topic Molecular dating
Taxonomy
Mitochondrial haplogroups
Mitogenome
Ovis
Philogeny
url https://peerj.com/articles/7895.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT paolomereu identificationofanancestralhaplotypeinthemitochondrialphylogenyoftheovinehaplogroupb
AT monicapirastru identificationofanancestralhaplotypeinthemitochondrialphylogenyoftheovinehaplogroupb
AT mariobarbato identificationofanancestralhaplotypeinthemitochondrialphylogenyoftheovinehaplogroupb
AT valentinasatta identificationofanancestralhaplotypeinthemitochondrialphylogenyoftheovinehaplogroupb
AT eleftherioshadjisterkotis identificationofanancestralhaplotypeinthemitochondrialphylogenyoftheovinehaplogroupb
AT lauramanca identificationofanancestralhaplotypeinthemitochondrialphylogenyoftheovinehaplogroupb
AT salvatorenaitana identificationofanancestralhaplotypeinthemitochondrialphylogenyoftheovinehaplogroupb
AT giovannigleoni identificationofanancestralhaplotypeinthemitochondrialphylogenyoftheovinehaplogroupb
_version_ 1725185136505389056