The Meishan pig genome reveals structural variation mediated gene expression and phenotypic divergence underlying Asian pig domestication.

2021 
There are wide genomic and phenotypic differences between Asian and European pig breeds, yet the current reference genome is the European Duroc pig genome. A high-quality pig genome is lacking for genetic analysis of agricultural traits in Asian pigs. Here, using a hybrid approach, a high-quality reference genome (MSCAAS v1) for the Asian Meishan breed is assembled with a contig N50 size of 48.05 Mb. MSCAAS v1 outperforms the Duroc genome as a reference genome for Asian breeds. Genomic comparison reveals 49,103 structural variations (SVs) between Meishan and Duroc, 4.02% of which are Asian-specific SVs (AP-SVs). Notably, a 30 Mb-hotspot for AP-SVs on chromosome X enriched for genes associated with Asian-pig-specific phenotypes is present in Asian domestic pig breeds, but absent in Asian wild boars, suggesting that Asian domestic breeds share a common ancestor. Inter-breed transcriptomics reveals transcriptional suppression roles of AP-SVs in multiple tissues. At last, transcriptional regulation in the intron of IGF2R is reported, as genomic SV (274 bp deletion) in Tibetan pig limits its growth compared to domestic pig breeds. In summary, this study provides insights about the genetic changes underlying pig domestication and presents a benchmark-setting resource for the utilization of agricultural valuable locus in Asian pigs.
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