Measuring conservation of contiguous sets of autosomal markers on bovine and porcine genomes in relation to the map of the human genome

ZH Jiang, JS Melville, HH Cao, S Kumar, A Filipski, AMV Gibbins

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

Based on published information, we have identified 991 genes and gene-family clusters for cattle and 764 for pigs that have orthologues in the human genome. The relative linear locations of these genes on human sequence maps were used as "rulers" to annotate bovine and porcine genomes based on a CSAM (contiguous sets of autosomal markers) approach. A CSAM is an uninterrupted set of markers in one genome (primary genome; the human genome in this study) that is syntenic in the other genome (secondary genome; the bovine and porcine genomes in this study). The analysis revealed 81 conserved syntenies and 161 CSAMs between human and bovine autosomes and 50 conserved syntenies and 95 CSAMs between human and porcine autosomes. Using the human sequence map as a reference, these 991 and 764 markers could correlate 72 and 74% of the human genome with the bovine and porcine genomes, respectively. Based on the number of contiguous markers in each CSAM, we classified these CSAMs into five size groups as follows: singletons (one marker only), small (2-4 markers), medium (5-10 markers), large (11-20 markers), and very large (> 20 markers). Several bovine and porcine chromosomes appear to be represented as di-CSAM repeats in a tandem or dispersed way on human chromosomes. The number of potential CSAMs for which no markers are currently available were estimated to be 63 between human and bovine genomes and 18 between human and porcine genomes. These results provide basic guidelines for further gene and QTL mapping of the bovine and porcine genomes, as well as insight into the evolution of mammalian genomes.

Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)769-776
Number of pages8
JournalGenome
Volume45
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2002

Keywords

  • Csam
  • Cattle
  • Comparative mapping
  • Human
  • Orthologous genes
  • Pig

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