Genes, Vol. 16, Pages 400: New Insights into Genetic Diversity and Differentiation of 11 Buffalo Populations Using Validated SNPs for Dairy Improvement
Genes doi: 10.3390/genes16040400
Authors:
Alfredo Pauciullo
Giustino Gaspa
Carmine Versace
Gianfranco Cosenza
Nadia Piscopo
Meichao Gu
Angelo Coletta
Tanveer Hussein
Alireza Seidavi
Ioana Nicolae
Attawit Kovitvadhi
Qingyou Liu
Jianghua Shang
Jingfang Si
Dongmei Dai
Yi Zhang
Background/Objectives: Buffalo populations exhibit distinct genetic variations influenced by domestication history, geographic distribution, and selection pressures. This study investigates the genetic structure and differentiation of 11 buffalo populations, focusing on five loci related to milk protein (CSN1S1 and CSN3) and fat metabolism (LPL, DGAT1 and SCD). The aim is to assess genetic variation between river, swamp, and wild-type buffaloes and identify key loci contributing to population differentiation. Methods: Genetic diversity was analyzed through allele frequency distribution, the Hardy−Weinberg equilibrium testing, and observed (Ho) and expected heterozygosity (He) calculations. Population structure was assessed using principal component analysis (PCA), FST statistics, and phylogenetic clustering (k-means and UPGMA tree). The silhouette score (SS) and the Davies−Bouldin index (DBI) were applied to determine optimal population clustering. Results: Significant genetic differentiation was observed between river and swamp buffaloes (p < 0.001). DGAT1 and CSN3 emerged as key markers distinguishing buffalo types. The Italian Mediterranean buffalo exhibited the highest genetic diversity (Ho = 0.464; He = 0.454), while the Indonesian, Chinese, and Vietnamese populations showed low heterozygosity, likely due to selection pressures and geographic isolation. The global FST (0.2143; p = 0.001) confirmed moderate differentiation, with closely related populations (e.g., Nepal and Pakistan) exhibiting minimal genetic divergence, while distant populations (e.g., Egypt and Indonesia) showed marked differences, and the Romanian population showed a unique genetic position. Conclusions: These findings contribute to a deeper understanding of buffalo genetic diversity and provide a valuable basis for exploiting the potential of this species in the light of future breeding and conservation strategies specific for each buffalo type.
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