Sequence variation, evolutionary constraint, and selection at the CD163 gene in pigs

Martin Johnsson, Roger Ros Freixedes, Gregor Gorjanc, Matt A. Campbell, Sudhir Naswa, Kimberly Kelly, Jonathan Lightner, Steve Rounsley, John Hickey

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background
In this work, we investigated sequence variation, evolutionary constraint, and selection at the CD163 gene in pigs. A functional CD163 protein is required for infection by porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus, which is a serious pathogen with major impacts on pig production.
Results
We used targeted pooled sequencing of the exons of CD163 to detect sequence variants in 35,000 pigs of diverse genetic backgrounds and to search for potential stop-gain and frameshift indel variants. Then, we used whole-genome sequence data from three pig lines to calculate: a variant intolerance score that measures the tolerance of genes to protein coding variation; an estimate of selection on protein-coding variation over evolutionary time; and haplotype diversity statistics to detect recent selective sweeps during breeding.
Conclusions
Using a deep survey of sequence variation in the CD163 gene in domestic pigs, we found no potential knockout variants. The CD163 gene was moderately intolerant to variation and showed evidence of positive selection in the pig lineage, but no evidence of recent selective sweeps during breeding.
Original languageEnglish
Article number69
Number of pages9
JournalGenetics Selection Evolution
Volume50
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 Dec 2018

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