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Mitochondrial DNA Variation and Evolution of Japanese Black Cattle (Bos taurus)
H. Mannena, S. Tsujia, R. T. Loftusb, and D. G. Bradleyba Faculty of Agriculture, Kobe University, Kobe 657, Japan
b Department of Genetics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland
Corresponding author: H. Mannen, Laboratory of Animal Breeding and Genetics, Faculty of Agriculture, Kobe University, 1-1 Rokkoudai, Kobe 657, Japan., mannen{at}kobe-u.ac.jp (E-mail).
Communicating editor: N. TAKAHATA
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
This article describes complete mitochondrial DNA displacement loop sequences from 32 Japanese Black cattle and the analysis of these data in conjunction with previously published sequences from African, European, and Indian subjects. The origins of North East Asian domesticated cattle are unclear. The earliest domestic cattle in the region were Bos taurus and may have been domesticated from local wild cattle (aurochsen; B. primigenius), or perhaps had an origin in migrants from the early domestic center of the Near East. In phylogenetic analyses, taurine sequences form a dense tree with a center consisting of intermingled European and Japanese sequences with one group of Japanese and another of all African sequences, each forming distinct clusters at extremes of the phylogeny. This topology and calibrated levels of sequence divergence suggest that the clusters may represent three different strains of ancestral aurochs, adopted at geographically and temporally separate stages of the domestication process. Unlike Africa, half of Japanese cattle sequences are topologically intermingled with the European variants. This suggests an interchange of variants that may be ancient, perhaps a legacy of the first introduction of domesticates to East Asia.
CATTLE have had an important but incompletely understood association with early human civilization, and study of their origins may enlighten us on hitherto unknown aspects of prehistory. All modern cattle have been considered to have the same roots in captured aurochsen from the primary domestication centers of Anatolia and the Fertile Crescent (![]()
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In North Eastern Asia (Mongolia, North China, Korea, and Japan), most cattle lack humps and are classified as Bos taurus (![]()
![]()
Around the second century A.D., cattle migrated from North China via the Korean peninsula to Japan. This cattle movement was accompanied by the introduction of rice cultivation. Both genetic (![]()
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In this study, we present an analysis of a large data set comprising mtDNA D-loop sequences for Japanese Black cattle. We analyze these in conjunction with published sequences of bison and of European, African, and India cattle and have assessed the relationships among them. The patterns of genetic variation suggest ancient population expansion and illustrate distinct taurine mtDNA lineages, which may have separate, predomestic ancestral origins. This study also indicates that Japanese cattle have been subjected to the introgression of mtDNA that are similar to European types and that may reflect either historical importation or a more ancient interplay between the cattle of Asia and Europe.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Animals:
We obtained 32 DNA samples of Japanese Black fattening cattle from 30 prefectures in Japan. DNA was extracted from lymphonoduli of the kidney knob. Complete D-loop sequences of European, African, and Indian cattle have been previously reported in GenBank (accession no.
L27712,
L27713,
L27714,
L27715,
L27716,
L27717,
L27718,
L27719,
L27720,
L27721,
L27722,
L27723,
L27724,
L27725,
L27726,
L27727,
L27728,
L27729,
L27730,
L27731,
L27732,
L27733,
L27734,
L27735,
L27736,
L27737 and
U51806,
U51807,
U51808,
U51809,
U51810,
U51811,
U51812,
U51813,
U51814,
U51815,
U51816,
U51817,
U51818,
U51819,
U51820,
U51821,
U51822,
U51823,
U51824,
U51825,
U51826,
U51827,
U51828,
U51829,
U51830,
U51831,
U51832,
U51833,
U51834,
U51835,
U51836,
U51837,
U51838,
U51839,
U51840,
U51841,
U51842). Samples of the outgroup species (Bison bison) were also obtained from GenBank (accession no. BBU12936, BBU12946, BBU12948, BBU12955, and BBU12959).
Sequencing:
The D-loop region of mtDNA was amplified using PCR with primers constructed from the published proline tRNA (5'-CTGCAGTCTCACCATCAACC-3') and 12S rRNA (5'-CTCCTCGGACAAGATATTAG-3') gene sequences (![]()
![]()
![]()
Sequence analysis:
Alignment of sequences was achieved using the CLUSTALW package (![]()
![]()
distribution parameter value
= 0.27 [estimated from these data using the method used by ![]()
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| RESULTS |
|---|
Variation in the bovine mtDNA D-loop:
Twenty-five complete bovine mtDNA D-loop sequences had been reported and analyzed previously (![]()
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![]()
![]()
|
Global genetic structure:
Genetic structure of B. taurus sequence variation was studied using the AMOVA approach (![]()
Genetic distances and divergence times:
Table 1 shows mean sequence divergence values between populations and within populations. The cattle populations each displayed similar levels of mean divergence (0.370.43%) with the exception of the Japan I sequence cluster, the members of which differed on average by only 0.12%. Japanese groups were related more closely to Europe than to Africa, and when grouped separately, Japan II sequences were related more closely to Europe than were Japan I. Values above the diagonal show pairwise FST values, which function as short-term genetic distances between populations (![]()
|
Comparison between bison and cattle sequences and assumption of a 1-myr separation time for the ancestral lineages has allowed an estimation of substitution rate in the bovine mtDNA D-loop at 30.1% per myr (![]()
distribution parameter value (
= 0.27), estimated using these data, the rate becomes 15.7% per myr. It is recognized that any calibration of the rate of substitution in the mtDNA D-loop is an exercise fraught with difficulty and subject to wide errors (![]()
![]()
![]()
Phylogenetic analysis:
Figure 2 shows a phylogenetic reconstruction featuring Indian, African, European and Japanese cattle populations including bison as a rooting outgroup and using pairwise FST values. All populations were significantly different (P < 0.01) when assessed using an exact test of population differentiation (![]()
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|
To focus on the relationships among African, European, and Japanese cattle, two types of trees were constructed using individual sequences as nodes and excluding the obviously divergent Indian samples; Figure 3 is a neighbor-joining tree, and Figure 4 is a reduced median network.
|
|
The major feature of the neighbor-joining tree shown in Figure 3 is a central starburst including intermingled European and Japanese sequences. One distinct group of Japanese sequences (corresponding to the Japan I partition) cluster separately and distantly from the center, as do the African sequences. Limitations with a neighbor-joining tree constructed from many closely related sequences are that this tree may impose only one of many solutions of similar validity and that it usually produces an artificially high level of resolution (![]()
A median network is a presentation that includes most parsimonious trees supported by the data; Figure 4 is a reduced network incorporating the same sequences in Figure 1. This network allows extant sequences as internal nodes, and the frequency with which each haplotype occurs is indicated by the area of the circle representing it. Lines connecting sequence nodes denote substitution. Small empty circles represent hypothetical sequences that have not been found in the previous and present study. However, the phylogenetic reconstruction suggests the circles as possible intermediates. Thus A5 is represented in two samples and differs from A7 by one transition in position 16,057. J9 differs from A5 by two transitions and through two possible hypothetical intermediates. Reticulations (ladders and squares) in the network indicate where character conflicts exist as a result of homoplasies (parallel mutations), and the frequency of these is an indication of the uneven distribution of substitution in the D-loop (![]()
![]()
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
In this study, we have obtained mtDNA D-loop sequences of Japanese Black cattle, which represent the first of such data from East Asian domesticates, and we have analyzed these in conjunction with previously published data from Europe, India, and Africa. Sequence comparisons, AMOVA, and phylogenetic analyses reveal that two major mtDNA families are represented in Japanese Black cattle; one has been detected exclusively in Japanese samples, whereas the second is comprised of samples that show sequences and patterns of variability similar to those found in Europe. Two explanations are possible for the presence of the latter group.
First, at the end of the 19th century, cattle of several European breeds were imported into Japan for the purpose of upgrading native breeds. It is possible that some of this exotic genetic material retains an influence in modern Japanese cattle. However, the original importation strategy failed because hybrid cattle required more feed than natives and became less active for draft (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
A second hypothesis is that the mixture between Japanese and European cattle may be due to more ancient interchange between the two continental populations before migration from North China to Japan. The Japanese Black are representatives of the Asian "Turano-Mongolian" type of cattle (![]()
A development of this hypothesis is that the pattern of Japanese mtDNA variation is a legacy of the early origins of North East Asian cattle. The major feature of the network (Figure 3 and Figure 4) is the existence of three clusters of some phylogenetic and also geographical integrity. One interpretation of the present data is that the central European/Japanese cluster, the African sequences, and the separate Japanese cluster centering on sequence J5 represent the descendants of West Asian, African, and North East Asian strains of wild B. primigenius, respectively. In each population, the numerical predominance and topological centrality (E12, A5, and most strikingly J5; Figure 4) suggest that these haplotypes may represent ancestral mitochondrial types of closely related variants in each region.
The earliest remains of cattle in a domestic context occur in Anatolia from at least 8000 YBP (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
In conclusion, bovine mtDNA D-loop sequences fall into four clusters: a highly divergent B. indicus group sampled in India and three less divergent B. taurus groupings. In phylogenetic analysis, the latter form a starburst tree, with a center consisting of intermingled European and Japanese sequences plus groups of Japanese and African sequences, which each form distinct clusters at extremes of the phylogeny. This topology and calibrated levels of sequence divergence suggest that the clusters may represent different strains of ancestral aurochs, adopted at geographically and temporally separate stages of the domestication process. It is also tempting to speculate that some of the more divergent haplotypes within each continent may be the descendants of minor adoptions of wild stock.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
The authors thank the Wagyu Registry Association for partial financial support. R.T.L. is supported under EU BIOTECH contract ERBBIO4CT961189. The Irish National Centre for Bioinformatics provided valuable assistance. We are also grateful for constructive criticism provided by two anonymous reviewers.
Manuscript received May 18, 1998; Accepted for publication August 11, 1998.
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