A Novel Insight into the Identification of Potential SNP Markers for the Genomic Characterization of Buffalo Breeds in Pakistan

Animals (Basel). 2023 Aug 7;13(15):2543. doi: 10.3390/ani13152543.

Abstract

Domestic buffaloes (Bubalus bubalis), known as water buffaloes, play a key role as versatile multipurpose agricultural animals in the Asiatic region. Pakistan, with the second-largest buffalo population in the world, holds a rich domestication history of buffaloes. The overall trends in buffalo production demand the genomic characterization of Pakistani buffalo breeds. To this end, the resequencing data of Pakistani breeds, along with buffalo breeds from 13 other countries, were retrieved from our previous study. This dataset, which contained 34,671,886 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), was analyzed through a pipeline that was developed to compare possible allele differences among breeds at each SNP position. In contrast, other available tools only check for positional SNP differences for breed-specific markers. In total, 1918, 1549, 404, and 341 breed-specific markers were identified to characterize the Nili, Nili-Ravi, Azakheli, and Kundi breeds of Pakistani buffalo, respectively. Sufficient evidence in the form of phenotypic data, principal component analysis, admixture analysis, and linkage analysis showed that the Nili breed has maintained its distinct breed status despite sharing a close evolutionary relationship with the Nili-Ravi breed of buffalo. In this era of genome science, the conservation of these breeds and the further validation of the given selection markers in larger populations is a pressing need.

Keywords: Bubalus bubalis; Nili; SNPs; breed-specific markers; buffalo genomics; buffaloes; selection signatures.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding, but the processing of the article was supported by the North Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station (NDAES), the North Dakota State Board of Agricultural Research and Education (SBARE), Grant Number 23-23-0259. M.A. (Muhammad Anas) was financially supported by the Higher Education Commission (HEC) of Pakistan, through the US–Pakistan Knowledge Corridor program for the completion of this manuscript.