ORIGINAL RESEARCH article
Front. Anim. Sci.
Sec. Animal Breeding and Genetics
Tracing shared genomic regions among local cattle breeds from Sardinia
Provisionally accepted- 1Section of Zootechnical Sciences, Department of Agriculture, University of Sassari, Sassari, Italy
- 2Universita degli Studi di Torino Dipartimento di Scienze Agrarie Forestali e Alimentari, Grugliasco, Italy
- 3University of Georgia, Department of Animal and Dairy Science, Athens, United States
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Three local cattle breeds are farmed in the island of Sardinia (Italy): Sarda (SAR), Sardo-Bruna (SB), and Sardo-Modicana (SM). Historically, SAR was the Sardinian autochthonous breed, known for its resilience despite low productivity. To improve its performance, SAR cows were crossbred with Brown Swiss (BR) and Modicana (MOD) bulls, originating SB and SM. The aim of this research was to investigate how much SAR genomic background remains in SB and SM. A sample of 239 animals (64 SAR, 57 SM, 20 SB, 50 BR and 48 MOD) were genotyped using the 50K SNP Illumina BeadChip. Initially, univariate approaches were used to investigate the genomic relationship of SB and SM with SAR, MOD, and BR. Admixture analysis (K=2) revealed a greater genetic similarity of SB with SAR than with BR, whereas SM showed a greater genetic proximity with MOD than with SAR. This was also reflected in the Weighted FST values: SAR and SB showed the lowest FST (0.015), confirming their closer relationship, whereas SB and BR showed the highest (0.058), consistent with their greater divergence. For SM, the FST with MOD (0.027) was lower than with SAR (0.030), supporting its closer affinity with MOD. SNP in ROH (SNPROH) analyses identified 21 genomic regions shared among Sardinian cattle breeds, where 3 genes (COMMD1, B3GNT2, and FAM161A) linked to environmental adaptation were found. Further analyses combining univariate and multivariate methods identified SNP with low discriminant power between SAR and the derived populations (SM and SB). Some of these regions overlapped with shared runs of homozygosity (ROHREP), and contained genes potentially associated with adaptation (CTNNA2, ITPR2, NTN1, and USP43). This study demonstrates that part of the SAR genome is still present in SB and SM, particularly in regions related to adaptive traits.
Keywords: Autochthonous cattle breeds, Adaptive genomic signatures, Runs of Homozygosity(ROH), Wright's Fixation Index (FST), Stepwise discriminant analyses (SDA), Canonical discriminantanalyses (CDA)
Received: 14 Aug 2025; Accepted: 23 Oct 2025.
Copyright: © 2025 Milia, Falchi, Cesarani, Macciotta and Dimauro. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
* Correspondence: Alberto Cesarani, acesarani@uniss.it
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