Genetic Diversity and Population Structure of the Arabian Horse Populations from Syria and other Countries

Humans and horses weaved together wonderful stories of adventure and generosity. As a part of human history and civilization, Arabian horses ignite imagination throughout the world. Populations of this breed exist in many countries. Here I explored different populations of Arabians representing Midd...

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Main Author: Khanshour, Anas M
Other Authors: Cothran, Ernest Gus
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/151156
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-1511562013-12-18T03:55:18ZGenetic Diversity and Population Structure of the Arabian Horse Populations from Syria and other CountriesKhanshour, Anas MSyrian horse populationGenetic diversityArabian horse strainsPopulations geneticsSyrian horsesAmerican-Arabian horsesGenetic differentiationHumans and horses weaved together wonderful stories of adventure and generosity. As a part of human history and civilization, Arabian horses ignite imagination throughout the world. Populations of this breed exist in many countries. Here I explored different populations of Arabians representing Middle Eastern and Western populations. The main two aims of this study were to provide the genetic diversity description of Arabians from different origins and to examine the traditional classification system of the breed. A third aim was to tackle the distribution pattern of the genetic variability within the genome to show whether there are differences in relative variability of different types of markers. First, I analyzed the genetic structure of 537Arabian horses from seven populations by using microsatellites. The results consistently showed higher levels of diversity within the Middle Eastern populations compared to the Western populations. All American-Arabians showed differentiation from Middle Eastern populations. Second, I sequenced the whole mtDNA D-loop of 251 Arabian horses. The whole D-loop sequence was more informative than using just the HVR1. Native populations from the Middle East, such as Syrian, represented a hot spot of genetic diversity. Most importantly, there was no evidence that the Arabian horse breed has clear subdivisions depending on the traditional maternal based strain classification system. Third, I tested the heterozygosity distribution pattern along the genome of 22 Peruvian Paso horses using 232 microsatellites and Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs). The pattern of genetic diversity was completely different between these two markers where no correlation was found. Runs of homozygosity test of SNPs and associated microsatellites noticeably showed that all of associated microsatellites loci were homozygous in the matched case. The findings of this study will help in understanding the evolutionary history and developing breeding and conservation programs of horses. This study provided databases including parentage testing system and maternal lineages that will help to recover the Syrian Arabian population after the armed conflict started in Syria in 2011. The results here can be applied not only to horses, but also to other animal species with similar criteria.Cothran, Ernest GusWelsh, JaneDerr, JamesRaudsepp, Terje2013-12-16T20:05:06Z2013-082013-07-05August 20132013-12-16T20:05:06ZThesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/151156en
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Syrian horse population
Genetic diversity
Arabian horse strains
Populations genetics
Syrian horses
American-Arabian horses
Genetic differentiation
spellingShingle Syrian horse population
Genetic diversity
Arabian horse strains
Populations genetics
Syrian horses
American-Arabian horses
Genetic differentiation
Khanshour, Anas M
Genetic Diversity and Population Structure of the Arabian Horse Populations from Syria and other Countries
description Humans and horses weaved together wonderful stories of adventure and generosity. As a part of human history and civilization, Arabian horses ignite imagination throughout the world. Populations of this breed exist in many countries. Here I explored different populations of Arabians representing Middle Eastern and Western populations. The main two aims of this study were to provide the genetic diversity description of Arabians from different origins and to examine the traditional classification system of the breed. A third aim was to tackle the distribution pattern of the genetic variability within the genome to show whether there are differences in relative variability of different types of markers. First, I analyzed the genetic structure of 537Arabian horses from seven populations by using microsatellites. The results consistently showed higher levels of diversity within the Middle Eastern populations compared to the Western populations. All American-Arabians showed differentiation from Middle Eastern populations. Second, I sequenced the whole mtDNA D-loop of 251 Arabian horses. The whole D-loop sequence was more informative than using just the HVR1. Native populations from the Middle East, such as Syrian, represented a hot spot of genetic diversity. Most importantly, there was no evidence that the Arabian horse breed has clear subdivisions depending on the traditional maternal based strain classification system. Third, I tested the heterozygosity distribution pattern along the genome of 22 Peruvian Paso horses using 232 microsatellites and Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs). The pattern of genetic diversity was completely different between these two markers where no correlation was found. Runs of homozygosity test of SNPs and associated microsatellites noticeably showed that all of associated microsatellites loci were homozygous in the matched case. The findings of this study will help in understanding the evolutionary history and developing breeding and conservation programs of horses. This study provided databases including parentage testing system and maternal lineages that will help to recover the Syrian Arabian population after the armed conflict started in Syria in 2011. The results here can be applied not only to horses, but also to other animal species with similar criteria.
author2 Cothran, Ernest Gus
author_facet Cothran, Ernest Gus
Khanshour, Anas M
author Khanshour, Anas M
author_sort Khanshour, Anas M
title Genetic Diversity and Population Structure of the Arabian Horse Populations from Syria and other Countries
title_short Genetic Diversity and Population Structure of the Arabian Horse Populations from Syria and other Countries
title_full Genetic Diversity and Population Structure of the Arabian Horse Populations from Syria and other Countries
title_fullStr Genetic Diversity and Population Structure of the Arabian Horse Populations from Syria and other Countries
title_full_unstemmed Genetic Diversity and Population Structure of the Arabian Horse Populations from Syria and other Countries
title_sort genetic diversity and population structure of the arabian horse populations from syria and other countries
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/151156
work_keys_str_mv AT khanshouranasm geneticdiversityandpopulationstructureofthearabianhorsepopulationsfromsyriaandothercountries
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