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Whole-genome sequencing of 128 camels across Asia reveals origin and migration of domestic Bactrian camels.

Liang MingLiyun YuanLi YiGuohui DingSurong HasiGangliang ChenTuyatsetseg JamblNemat Hedayat-EvrightMijiddorj BatmunkhGaryaeva Khongr BadmaevnaTudeviin Gan-ErdeneBatsukh TsWenbin ZhangAzhati Zulipikaernull Hosblignull ErdemtArkady NatyrovPrmanshayev Mamaynull NarenbatuGendalai MengChoijilsuren NarangerelOrgodol KhongorzulJing HeLe HaiWeili Linnull Sirendalainull Sarentuyanull AiyisiYixue LiZhen Wangnull Jirimutu
Published in: Communications biology (2020)
The domestic Bactrian camels were treated as one of the principal means of locomotion between the eastern and western cultures in history. However, whether they originated from East Asia or Central Asia remains elusive. To address this question, we perform whole-genome sequencing of 128 camels across Asia. The extant wild and domestic Bactrian camels show remarkable genetic divergence, as they were split from dromedaries. The wild Bactrian camels also contribute little to the ancestry of domestic ones, although they share close habitat in East Asia. Interestingly, among the domestic Bactrian camels, those from Iran exhibit the largest genetic distance and the earliest split from all others in the phylogeny, despite evident admixture between domestic Bactrian camels and dromedaries living in Central Asia. Taken together, our study support the Central Asian origin of domestic Bactrian camels, which were then immigrated eastward to Mongolia where native wild Bactrian camels inhabit.
Keyphrases
  • south africa
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • genetic diversity
  • newly diagnosed