Molecular Characterization of Sudanese and Southern Sudanese Chicken Breeds Using mtDNA D-Loop

  • Wani C
  • Yousif I
  • Ibrahim M
  • et al.
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Abstract

The objective of this study was to assess the genetic relationships and diversity and to estimate the amount of gene flow among the five chicken populations from Sudan and South Sudan and commercial strain of egg line White Leghorn chickens. The chicken populations were genotyped using mtDNA D-loop as a molecular marker. PCR product of the mtDNA D-loop segment was 600 bp and 14 haplotypes were identified. The neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree indicated that the indigenous Sudanese chickens can be grouped into two clades, IV and IIIa only. Median joining networks analysis showed that haplotype LBB49 has the highest frequency. The hierarchal analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) showed that genetic variation within the population was 88.6% and the differentiation among the population was 11.4%. When the populations was redefined into two geographical zones, rich and poor Savanna, the results were fractioned into three genetic variations: between individuals within population 95.5%, between populations within the group 0.75%, and genetic variation between groups 3.75%. The pair wise F st showed high genetic difference between Betwil populations and the rest with F st ranging from 0.1492 to 0.2447. We found that there is large number of gene exchanges within the Sudanese indigenous chicken ( Nm = 4.622 ).

Figures

  • Table 1: Primers used for the amplification and sequencing of HVI segment of the D-loop.
  • Table 2: Reference chicken haplotypes.
  • Figure 1: Pattern of mtDNA D-loop variability. Note: nucleotide polymorphisms observed in D-loop HV1 domain of 81 chicken sequences. Vertically oriented numbers indicate the site position and the sequences shown are only the variable sites. Dots (.) indicate identity with the reference sequence and different base letters denote substitution.
  • Table 3: Nucleotide substitutions in D-loop HVI region of indigenous Sudanese and Southern Sudanese chicken.
  • Figure 2: (a) Neighbour-joining tree reconstructed usingMEGA 3.1 software from 11 haplotypes identified in Sudanese indigenous chickens, two haplotypes of the genus Gallus retrieved from GenBank: Gallus gallus gallus (GenBank accession number AB007720) and Gallus gallus bankiva (GenBank accession number AB007718), and seven clade reference haplotypes (Clade I, II, IIIa, IIIb, IIIc, IIId, and IV).The numbers at the nodes represent the percentage bootstrap values for interior branches after 1000 replications. (b) Neighbour-joining tree reconstructed using MEGA 3.1 software from 14 haplotypes identified in Sudanese indigenous chickens, two haplotypes of the genus Gallus retrieved from GenBank: Gallus gallus gallus (GenBank accession number AB007720) and Gallus gallus bankiva (GenBank accession number AB007718), and seven clade reference haplotypes (Clade I, II, IIIa, IIIb, IIIc, IIId, and IV). The numbers at the nodes represent the percentage bootstrap values for interior branches after 1000 replications.
  • Figure 3: (a) Median-joining network (πœ€ = 0) for 11 haplotypes of the northern Sudan indigenous chickens and one haplotype of commercial layers. The yellow circles refer to clade IV while the green circle refers to clade IIIc and the green circle denotes clade IIIc. The size of the circles is proportional to the frequency of the respective haplotypes and the numbers between the haplotype nodes refer to the positions of the nucleotide mutations compared to reference sequence (GenBank accession AB098668). (b) The yellow circles refer to clade IV and the green circle refers to clade IIIc while the red circle denotes clade IIIa.
  • Table 4:mtDNAD-loop sequence diversity indices in Sudanese and Southern Sudanese chicken populations based on 397 nucleotides.
  • Table 5: Pair wise𝑁st and 𝐹st values between 5 chicken populations based on D-loop sequences.

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APA

Wani, C. E., Yousif, I. A., Ibrahim, M. E., & Musa, H. H. (2014). Molecular Characterization of Sudanese and Southern Sudanese Chicken Breeds Using mtDNA D-Loop. Genetics Research International, 2014, 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/928420

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