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Article Abstract

In this study, genome-wide CNVs were identified using a total of 469 horses from four horse populations (Jeju horses, Thoroughbreds, Jeju riding horses, and Hanla horses). We detected a total of 843 CNVRs throughout all autosomes: 281, 30, 301, and 310 CNVRs for Jeju horses, Thoroughbreds, Jeju riding horses, and Hanla horses, respectively. Of the total CNVRs, copy number losses were found to be the most abundant (48.99%), while gains and mixed CNVRs accounted for 41.04% and 9.96% of the total CNVRs, respectively. The length of the CNVRs ranged from 0.39 kb to 2.8 Mb, while approximately 7.2% of the reference horse genome assembly was covered by the total CNVRs. By comparing the CNVRs among the populations, we found a significant portion of the CNVRs (30.13%) overlapped; the highest number of shared CNVRs was between Hanla horses and Jeju riding horses. When compared with the horse CNVRs of previous studies, 26.8% of CNVRs were found to be uniquely detected in this study. The CNVRs were not randomly distributed throughout the genome; in particular, the autosome (ECA) 7 comprised the largest proportion of its genome (16.3%), while ECA 24 comprised the smallest (0.7%). Furthermore, functional analysis was applied to CNVRs that overlapped with genes (genic-CNVRs); these overlapping areas may be potentially associated with the olfactory pathway and nervous system. A racing performance QTL was detected in a CNVR of Thoroughbreds, Jeju riding horses, and Hanla horses, and the CNVR value was mixed for three breeds.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9774267PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12243501DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • A total of 843 copy number variable regions (CNVRs) were identified across four horse populations, with varying numbers of CNVRs found in each group.
  • Approximately 48.99% of these CNVRs represent copy number losses, and the CNVRs ranged in size from 0.39 kb to 2.8 Mb, covering about 7.2% of the reference horse genome.
  • A significant overlap of 30.13% was found among CNVRs between populations, particularly between Hanla and Jeju riding horses, and functional analyses suggested associations with the olfactory pathway and nervous system, as well as a detected racing performance QTL.
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