Glenna Picton
713-798-4712
Bovine
genome provides clue to evolution, better beef and milk
HOUSTON (April 24, 2009)
– Sequencing of the bovine genome provides new information about mammalian evolution
as well as cattle-specific biology and points the way to research that could
result in more sustainable food production in a world challenged by global
population growth, said a consortium of researchers led by the Baylor College of
Medicine Human Genome Sequencing Center in two reports that appear today in the
journal Science.
“The future challenge will be to explore the bovine genome sequence in
greater depth to fully understand the genetic basis of the evolutionary success of ruminants
as this will provide opportunities to address some of the crucial issues of the present time
– efficient and sustainable food production for a rapidly increasing human
population,” said Dr. Richard Gibbs, director of the BCM Human Genome Sequencing Center
and principal investigator on the project.” The cattle sequence took six years to complete, annotate and analyze and has involved over 300 scientists from 25 countries. Most of more than 25 companion reports describing detailed analyses of the two projects by the Bovine Sequencing Project and the Bovine Hapmap Consortia appear online at www.biomedcentral.com in a special electronic issue of the BioMed Central journal group.
The Bovine
(Cow) Genome Sequencing Project sequenced the genome of a female
Hereford cow.
“The mammals we have looked at previously have been laboratory animals and
humans,” said Dr. Kim C. Worley, associate professor in the sequencing center and a
corresponding author. ”This is the first mammalian livestock animal we have
studied.” The authors concluded that
the bovine genome, consisting of at least 22,000 genes, is more similar to that of
humans than that of mice or rats. They note that
most cattle chromosomes correspond to part or all of human chromosomes,
although the DNA is rearranged in some areas.
“During
evolution, domesticated cattle and other ruminants diverged from a
common ancestor that gave rise to humans about 95 million years ago, yet
cattle and humans still share a high degree of conservation in the organization of
their chromosome architectures, far more so than humans and mice” do, said
Dr. Harris Lewin, one of the lead analysts from the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign. “We were surprised to find that, like humans,
duplicated segments appear to have played a major role in the rearrangements of
chromosomes in the cattle lineage.”
Some of these rearrangements appear important to cattle biology because they
affect genes involved in immunity, lactation, metabolism and digestion. These
changes could help explain the amazing ability of cattle to convert low-quality
forage efficiently into energy-dense meat and milk, a fact that benefits humans.
One particular genetic rearrangement involves the histatherin gene in mammary tissue,
which undergoes special regulation during lactation to produce a novel protein in milk
that has anti-microbial activity. Other gene changes aid in the transfer of
immunoglobulin G to milk and the subsequent transference of innate immunity to suckling
calves from their dams.
The researchers said, “Observation suggests that species-specific changes
in genome organization and gene regulation may help tailor the functional
components of milk to the specific needs of newborn mammals. They also add to the
mounting evidence that milk contains ‘innate immune’ proteins that may be
important for gut protection and gut development in the suckling young as well as the
health of the mammary gland.”
“More generally, it appears that the cow has significant rearrangements in
many of its immune genes and enhanced innate immune defense capacity. This may
be in response to increased risk of opportunistic infections at mucosal
surfaces caused by the large number of microorganisms carried in the rumen (the
largest of the four compartments that make up the bovine stomach),” said Dr.
Ross Tellam of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organization of Australia.
The knowledge gleaned from this sequencing could lead to more efficient beef and milk
production, the researchers noted.
In a companion report, the bovine HapMap (a literal map of genetic diversity
among different populations) described genetic variation among different
branches of the bovine tree, starting with the major division between the humpless
taurine cattle most commonly found in Europe, Africa and East and West Asia and
the indicine found in India, South and West Asia and East Africa.
The researchers used the complete sequence from a single Hereford cow and
comparative genome sequences for six more breeds to look for changes
called single nucleotide polymorphisms or SNPs in 497 cattle from 17
geographically
and biologically diverse breeds and two related species (Anoa and Water
Buffalo).
Their studies indicate the cattle have a diverse ancestral population that
has undergone a recent rapid decrease in effective population size,
probably because of domestication, selection and the development of breeds. The
evolution of humans and cattle intertwined between 8,000 and 10,000
years ago, and today there are more than 800 cattle breeds selected for different
economic, social and religious reasons.
“Domestication and artificial selection appears to have left
detectable signatures of selection within the cattle genome yet the current level
of diversity within breeds is at least as great as exists within humans,”
the authors noted.
The scientists found that genetic diversity among the taurine breeds was
similar to that found in humans but less than that in the indicine breeds, giving
support to the theory that cattle were separately domesticated on the Indian
subcontinent from more diverse wild populations.
Although the decline in diversity among cattle is rapid enough to prompt concern
among cattle breeders, the new tools will enable better conservation of genetic
diversity in the species, the scientists reported.
The implications of the
genome project for the beef and dairy industries loom large.
Dr. Gordon Doak, president of
National Association of Animal Breeders, an industry trade group of
organizations that market semen for breeding dairy and beef cattle,
said, “The availability of very large numbers of single nucleotide polymorphisms
(single letter changes in the genetic blueprint) has allowed the development of
gene chips that measure genetic variation in cattle populations and will
allow the rapid selective breeding of animals with higher value commercial
traits,” he said. “This technology is quickly transforming the dairy genetics
industry and has the potential to dramatically alter beef cattle industries as well.
” These new tools provide a
means of selection of more energy-efficient animals with a smaller environmental
footprint, particularly animals with less greenhouse gas emissions. The effort was a true
collaboration. For example, researchers from the University of Houston also took part.
"As usual we analyzed
compositional heterogeneity and used it to locate genes. We also
analyzed potential errors due to quality of sequences by comparing the old draft
genome with the finished version," said Dr. Dan
Graur, UH professor of biology and biochemistry The sequencing project was
led by Drs. Gibbs and George Weinstock, co-directors of the BCM-HGSC, Dr.
Steven Kappes of the United States Department of Agriculture, Dr. Christine
Elsik of Georgetown University and Dr. Ross Tellam of CSIRO Australia. The
HapMap project was led by Gibbs, Dr. Curt Van Tassell of the United States
Department of Agriculture and Dr. Jeremy Taylor of the
University of Missouri. A full listing of participants can be found in
the article at www.sciencemag.org.
Funding was
provided by an international group consisting of the National Human Genome Research
Institute, which funded more than half of the project; the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service and Cooperative State
Research, Education, and Extension Service National Research Initiative; the
state of Texas; Genome Canada through Genome British Columbia; The Alberta
Science and Research Authority; The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organization of Australia (CSIRO); Agritech Investments Ltd., Dairy
Insight, Inc. and AgResearch Ltd., all of New Zealand; the Research Council of
Norway; the Kleberg Foundation; and the National, Texas and South Dakota Beef
Check-off Funds. Funding for the genetic diversity
work was provided by
: American
Angus Association, American Hereford Association, American Jersey Cattle
Association, AgResearch (New Zealand), Beef CRC and Meat and Livestock Australia
for the Australian Brahman Breeders Association, Beefmaster Breeders United,
The Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa), Brown Swiss Association,
GENO Breeding and Artificial Insemination Association - Norway, Herd Book/France
Limousin Selection, Holstein Association USA, International Atomic Energy Agency
-
FAO/IAEA Vienna, International Livestock Research Institute – Kenya,
Italian Piedmontese Breeders - Parco Tecnologico Padano, Italian Romagnola
Society - Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Livestock Improvement
Corporation, Meat & Wool New Zealand. North American Limousin Foundation, Red Angus
Association of America, The Roslin Institute for UK Guernsey, and Sygen (now
Genus). ### For more information on
basic science research at Baylor College of Medicine, please go to www.bcm.edu/fromthelab. |