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Mitochondrial Sequence Variation, Haplotype Diversity, and Relationships Among Dromedary Camel-Types

Randa Alaqeely, Bader H. Alhajeri, Faisal Almathen, Hasan Alhaddad

2021Frontiers in Genetics16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Dromedary camels are outstanding livestock that developed efficient abilities to tolerate desert conditions. Many dromedary camel-types (i.e., named populations) exist but lack defined specific breed standards, registries, and breeders’ governing organizations. The breed status of dromedary camel-types can partly be assessed by exploring mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation. Accordingly, this study aimed to examine the breed status and the inter-population relationships of dromedary camel-types by analyzing sequence variation in the mtDNA control region and in three coding genes [ cytochrome b , threonine, and proline tRNA , and part of the displacement loop (D-loop)] (867 bp region). Tail hair samples ( n = 119) that represent six camel-types from Kuwait were collected, extracted, sequenced, and compared to other publicly available sequences ( n = 853). Within the sequenced mitochondrial region, 48 polymorphic sites were identified that contributed to 82 unique haplotypes across 37 camel-types. Haplotype names and identities were updated to avoid previous discrepancies. When all sequences were combined ( n = 972), a nucleotide diversity of 0.0026 and a haplotype diversity of 0.725 was observed across the dromedary-types. Two major haplogroups (A and B) were identified and the B1 haplotype was predominant and found in almost all dromedary-types whereas the A haplotypes were more abundant in African regions. Non-metric multidimensional scaling revealed an increased similarity among Arabian Peninsula “Mezayen” camel-types, despite their defining coat colors. The relationships among dromedary camel-types can partly be explained by mtDNA. Future work aimed at a deeper understanding of camel-type breed status should focus on a high number of nuclear markers.

Topics & Concepts

HaplotypeHaplogroupMitochondrial DNABiologyBreedNucleotide diversitymtDNA control regionEvolutionary biologyGenetic diversityGeneticsGenetic variationPopulationGeneAlleleDemographySociologyAnimal Diversity and Health StudiesRangeland Management and Livestock EcologyGenetic diversity and population structure
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