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North Africa counts several sheep breeds that can be categorized as fat- and thin-tailed. The former are well adapted to dryland environments. In this study, we used 50K genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism profiles from 462 animals representing nine fat-tailed and 13 thin-tailed sheep breeds across North Africa to localize genomic regions putatively under differential selective pressures between the two types of breeds. We observed genetic clines from east to west and from north to south. The east-west cline separates the fat- and thin-tailed breeds, with the exception of the fat-tailed Algerian Barbarine, which is closely related to a genetically homogeneous cluster of Moroccan and Algerian thin-tailed breeds. Using a combination of three extended haplotype homozygosity tests, we detected seven candidate regions under divergent selection between fat- and thin-tailed sheep. The strongest selection signals reside on chromosomes 1 and 13, with the latter spanning the BMP2 gene, known to be associated with the fat-tail phenotype. Overall, the candidate regions under selection in fat-tailed sheep overlap with genes associated with adaptation to desert-like environments including adipogenesis, as well as heat and drought tolerance. Our results confirm previously reported candidate genes known to be a target of fat-tail selection in sheep but also reveal novel candidate genes specifically under selection in North African populations.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/age.13487 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
July 2025
College of Engineering and Applied Science, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 3200 N Cramer St, Milwaukee, WI, 53211, USA.
This study investigates how manufacturing defects transform the statistical distribution of failure in carbon fiber-reinforced polymer composites under tension and compression loading. The analysis of tension and compression specimens reveals that defect-free composites exhibit relatively narrow, unimodal strength distributions. In contrast, specimens with porosity or fiber waviness develop more complex multimodal probability densities with fat-tailed distributions and substantially higher variability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVet Med Sci
July 2025
Department of Animal Breeding and Husbandry, Ondokuz Mayis University Veterinary Faculty, Atakum, Turkey.
The study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of the Europ carcass classification system (ECCS) in discriminating between carcass characteristics and meat quality of fat-tailed (FT) and thin-tailed (TT) lambs. In this study, 45 single male lambs of the breeds Akkaraman (n = 14), Karayaka (n = 15), and Herik (n = 16) were used. The lambs were fed and slaughtered at 40 kg.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Genomics
May 2025
Department of Animal Genetics, Breeding and Reproduction, College of Animal Science, Shanxi Agricultural University, Taigu, 030801, China.
Background: The accumulation of tail fat in sheep is a manifestation of adaptive evolution to the environment. Sheep with different tail types show significant differences in physiological functions and tail fat deposition. Although these differences reflect the developmental mechanism of tail fat under different gene regulation, the situation of sheep tail fat tissue at the single cell level has not been explored, and its molecular mechanism still needs to be further elucidated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Adv Res
May 2025
Institute of Animal Sciences, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing 100193, China. Electronic address:
Introduction: Since their domestication, domestic sheep (Ovis aries) have been culturally and economically significant farming animals worldwide. Fat-tailed sheep serve as a unique genetic resource for understanding adipogenesis and adaptive evolution in livestock.
Objectives: Several genomic analyses have been conducted on various sheep breeds to elucidate the genome and regulation mechanism of the fat tail trait, prior genomic studies have failed to reconcile conflicting evidence about the genetic basis of tail morphology, particularly regarding the roles of PDGFD and BMP2.
PLoS One
December 2024
Embrapa Southeast Livestock, São Carlos, Brazil.
Different sheep breeds show distinct phenotypic plasticity in fat deposition in the tails. The genetic background underlying fat deposition in the tail of sheep is complex, multifactorial, and may involve allele-specific expression (ASE) mechanism to modulate allelic expression. ASE is a common phenomenon in mammals and refers to allelic imbalanced expression modified by cis-regulatory genetic variants that can be observed at heterozygous loci.
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