0:00:01.200,0:00:09.000 Hello. The topic of this lecture is using of  molecular genetics in determining the origin 0:00:09.000,0:00:16.260 of dogs and cats. The lecture is part of  Module 4, Precision Livestock Farming. 0:00:16.800,0:00:21.660 The creation of this presentation was  supported by the ERASMUS+ KA2 grant 0:00:21.660,0:00:27.180 within the project ISAGREED, Innovation  of Content and Structure of Study Programs 0:00:27.180,0:00:32.040 in the Field of Animal Genetic and Food  Resources Management Using Digitalization. 0:00:33.840,0:00:40.440 Plant and animal domestication are rightly  considered to be the main human cultural 0:00:40.440,0:00:46.080 innovations, ranking in importance  alongside tool production, fire control, 0:00:46.080,0:00:53.400 or the development of verbal language. Animal  domestication has interested biologists since 0:00:53.400,0:01:01.260 the time when Charles Darwin first pointed out  the parallel between evolution through natural 0:01:01.260,0:01:07.680 selection and the breeding of agricultural  and social animals carried out by humans. 0:01:08.460,0:01:13.560 Molecular genetics can be used to  determine the origin of dogs and cats. 0:01:15.360,0:01:22.020 After the appearance of the domestic dog  (Canis familiaris) in archaeological finds, 0:01:22.020,0:01:26.520 the domestication of crops and  livestock followed soon after, 0:01:27.300,0:01:34.200 allowing humans to significantly expand the food  they obtained through hunting and gathering. 0:01:35.040,0:01:41.280 As a result, during the Neolithic transition -  archaeologically documented transition from a 0:01:41.280,0:01:49.320 hunter-gatherer mode of food production to plant  cultivation and animal husbandry - increasingly 0:01:49.320,0:01:54.960 sophisticated agricultural societies  developed in many parts of Eurasia, 0:01:54.960,0:01:57.960 northern Africa, and South and Central America. 0:01:59.100,0:02:06.540 The figure shows timelines of the domestication  of a range of animal species, along with 0:02:06.540,0:02:15.540 corresponding information on key climatic events  in the last 20,000 years, which likely influenced 0:02:15.540,0:02:22.320 the emergence of agriculture. The domestication  of dogs was proven to have occurred around 0:02:23.520,0:02:31.380 15,000 years ago, but they accompanied humans  several thousand years earlier. On the other hand, 0:02:31.380,0:02:38.340 the cat is one of the youngest animal species  to be domesticated, about 5,000 years ago. 0:02:40.980,0:02:47.820 The origin of dogs has been analyzed using the  variability of the ASIP gene for coat color. 0:02:48.540,0:02:54.720 Distinctive coat color patterns are  an integral part of their diversity. 0:02:55.380,0:03:01.680 It is believed that differences in color  arose through mutations and artificial 0:03:01.680,0:03:07.680 selection during and after domestication from  wolves, but there are significant gaps in 0:03:07.680,0:03:12.660 understanding how these patterns evolved  and how they are genetically controlled. 0:03:12.660,0:03:21.420 Specific coat color patterns are caused  by differential regulation of the Agouti 0:03:21.420,0:03:28.500 (ASIP) gene, which encodes a paracrine  signaling molecule and antagonist of the 0:03:28.500,0:03:36.120 melanocortin 1 receptor gene (MC1R), which causes  hair follicle melanocytes to switch from producing 0:03:36.120,0:03:43.260 eumelanin (black or brown pigment) to producing  pheomelanin (yellow to nearly white pigment). 0:03:44.160,0:03:51.720 The figure shows examples of five patterns  caused by regulatory deviations of the ASIP gene. 0:03:51.720,0:04:02.400 Dominant yellow (DY), shaded yellow (SY),  agouti (AG), black saddle (BS), and black (BB). 0:04:02.400,0:04:12.900 The canine ASIP gene has three alternative  promoters and 5' non-coding exons. 0:04:13.800,0:04:21.300 Structural differences within 1.5-kb  segments of promoters specific for 0:04:21.300,0:04:30.780 ventral (VP) and hair cycle (HCP) explain the  five different coat color patterns in dogs. 0:04:31.920,0:04:39.240 Schematically, two VP haplotypes and  five HCP haplotypes are indicated. 0:04:40.140,0:04:47.280 The star denotes the third promoter and  non-coding exon not related to the ASIP pattern. 0:04:48.060,0:04:49.500 At the bottom of the figure, 0:04:49.500,0:04:57.060 we can see the five types of coloration  and combinations of VP and HCP haplotypes. 0:04:59.700,0:05:06.480 Yellow dogs and white wolves share  an ancient haplotype of ASIP. 0:05:06.480,0:05:16.200 In picture a), genotypes at 377 SNVs  (columns) at the ASIP locus in gray 0:05:16.200,0:05:23.880 wolves and dogs (rows) are shown, encoded for  heterozygosity (light blue), homozygosity for 0:05:23.880,0:05:30.540 the reference (yellow) or alternative (dark  blue) allele, or as missing genotypes (white). 0:05:32.040,0:05:40.380 Alternative first exons (arrows) and nearby  structural variants associated with DY 0:05:41.820,0:05:48.840 (SINE insertions, green; polynucleotide  expansions, orange) are included for reference. 0:05:50.280,0:05:57.300 Picture b) shows the phylogeny including  seven extant canid species and the dog, 0:05:57.900,0:06:05.460 from 48 and 16 kb before and after the  haplotype of canine pigmentation (HCP), 0:06:06.060,0:06:13.920 respectively. Phylogenetic clusters of the  gray wolf and dog are emphasized by squares 0:06:13.920,0:06:22.380 indicating relationships consistent (blue) or  inconsistent (red) with the genome-wide phylogeny. 0:06:23.640,0:06:29.340 In picture d), the phylogeny represents  the distinct evolutionary history of 0:06:29.340,0:06:37.380 HCP derived from genetic variation in extant  canids. Structural variants and derived SNVs 0:06:37.380,0:06:46.860 (cyan) differentiate haplotypes of Canids (blue),  Ghost lineages (red), and basic canids (black). 0:06:49.620,0:06:57.120 The evolutionary origin of ASIP haplotypes  was examined by constructing phylogenetic 0:06:57.120,0:07:03.000 trees using the maximum likelihood  method. All dogs and gray wolves form 0:07:03.000,0:07:09.240 a single cluster corresponding to known  species relationships. However, in the 0:07:09.240,0:07:17.220 HCP tree, dominant yellow and shaded yellow dogs  form a separate cluster with Arctic gray wolves; 0:07:17.220,0:07:24.840 notably, this cluster is basal to the golden  jackal and distinct from other canid species. 0:07:27.240,0:07:34.320 Distribution of ASIP alleles in ancient dogs  and wolves and the evolutionary model for the 0:07:34.320,0:07:41.100 acquisition of dominant yellow color. ASIP  haplotypes in five ancient dogs (circles), 0:07:41.100,0:07:49.800 two ancient wolves (squares), and 68 modern  wolves (pie charts) occurring in the Holarctic. 0:07:50.520,0:07:55.740 Picture b) presents a model for the origin  of the dominant yellow haplotype and its 0:07:55.740,0:08:03.840 transmission to dogs and arctic wolf canids,  in which molecular changes in modular promoters 0:08:03.840,0:08:13.140 were acquired by introgression (red, HCP1)  or mutation in gray wolves (blue, VP1). 0:08:14.820,0:08:26.100 Phylogeny of canids for VP (48 kb) and HCP (16  kb) regions. Derived substitutions shared by 0:08:26.100,0:08:36.300 gray wolves and dogs (blue). Ancestral alleles  on DY/Arctic wolf haplotypes (red) or BB and 0:08:37.860,0:08:45.180 DY/Arctic wolf haplotypes (orange), corresponding  to derived substitutions within the canid lineage. 0:08:46.320,0:08:52.620 In picture b), dashed lines delineate the  HCP region (chr24:23,375,800–23,380,000). 0:08:54.540,0:09:00.960 The solid line denotes the lower boundary  for phylogenetic analysis. Solid green and 0:09:00.960,0:09:06.660 orange lines indicate the location of  SINEs and 24-bp insertion associated 0:09:06.660,0:09:18.540 with DY/Arctic wolf haplotype, respectively. Segments of ASIP haplotypes. Color (red or blue) 0:09:18.540,0:09:24.600 of ASIP haplotype segments indicates ancestral  origin inferred from phylogenetic analysis. 0:09:25.380,0:09:34.800 Relevant structural variants near ventral (VP)  and hair cycle (HCP) promoters are shown as yellow 0:09:34.800,0:09:43.980 triangles (polynucleotide expansions), green bars  (SINE insertions), and white bars (deletions). 0:09:45.240,0:09:50.760 Altered promoter activity is marked  by a cross (no activity) or additional 0:09:50.760,0:09:58.500 arrow (enhanced expression) based on  RNA-seq and/or fur color derivation. 0:10:01.020,0:10:04.740 The widespread distribution of  dominant yellow color in modern 0:10:04.740,0:10:10.860 dog breeds from various locations, as  well as in the wild domesticated dog, 0:10:11.400,0:10:19.080 the dingo, frequently found in Australia, suggests  that the dog originated in Southeast Asia. 0:10:20.040,0:10:25.980 Another published study indicates that  the hypothesis of self-domestication can 0:10:25.980,0:10:31.620 finally be rigorously tested and evaluated  using high-resolution comparative genomics. 0:10:33.540,0:10:41.460 Origin of cats. Wildcats (Felis silvestris)  are distributed throughout the Old World. 0:10:42.300,0:10:48.960 DNA analysis suggests that  cats lived alongside humans for 0:10:48.960,0:10:56.700 thousands of years before they were domesticated. During that time, their genes changed little from 0:10:56.700,0:11:03.360 those of wild cats, except for one recent change:  the distinctive tabby markings of domestic cats. 0:11:03.960,0:11:11.460 Surprisingly, wild and domestic cats showed no  major differences in genetic makeup, and one of 0:11:11.460,0:11:17.760 the few available traits by which they could  be distinguished was the tabby coat markings. 0:11:19.500,0:11:26.940 The early ancestors of today's domestic  cats spread from southwest Asia to Europe as 0:11:26.940,0:11:37.620 early as 4400 BCE. Cats likely began to frequent  agricultural communities in the Fertile Crescent 0:11:37.620,0:11:45.660 about 8000 years ago, where they settled into a  mutually beneficial relationship as human rodent 0:11:45.660,0:11:53.040 controllers. The second lineage, consisting  of African cats that dominated in Egypt, 0:11:53.040,0:12:02.400 spread to the Mediterranean and the rest of  the Old World around 1500 BCE. These Egyptian 0:12:02.400,0:12:09.900 cats likely exhibited behavior that made them  attractive to humans, such as sociability and 0:12:09.900,0:12:20.220 tameness. Modern genetic analysis of nuclear short  tandem repeats (STRs) and 16% of the mitochondrial 0:12:20.220,0:12:27.300 DNA (mtDNA) genome in living wild and domestic  cats has revealed that only one of them, 0:12:27.300,0:12:34.020 the North African/Southwest Asian Felis silvestris  lybica, has been ultimately domesticated. 0:12:36.360,0:12:43.140 Spatial-temporal distribution of cat maternal  genealogies. Map a) showing the current 0:12:43.140,0:12:50.040 distribution of the Felis silvestris species  with the geographic area of each subspecies. 0:12:52.140,0:13:00.480 B) mtDNA tree of the observed lines in  ancient samples and modern wild and domestic 0:13:00.480,0:13:09.420 cats from literature. C) Spatial-temporal  representation of ancient cat haplotypes, 0:13:09.420,0:13:18.540 as depicted by symbols from the tree in point b. Spatial-temporal representation of alleles 0:13:18.540,0:13:26.460 determining the phenotypic variation of tabby  patterns: mackerel (Ta^M) and spotted (Ta^b). 0:13:26.460,0:13:32.400 We can see that the mackerel pattern is older,  and the spotted pattern appeared only after 0:13:32.400,0:13:39.420 the turn of the century. The picture shows a  "cat under a chair" from an ancient Egyptian 0:13:39.420,0:13:46.560 painting with a typical mackerel tabby pattern,  characteristic for F. silvestris lybica cats. 0:13:48.840,0:13:56.880 The domestication of cats was a complex, long-term  process with extensive translocations that allowed 0:13:56.880,0:14:03.060 gene flow between geographically separated  cat populations at different time periods. 0:14:03.660,0:14:08.520 Cats became domesticated companions  of humans without changing too much. 0:14:09.240,0:14:14.280 Domestic cats look similar to wild  cats, but they are not solitary 0:14:14.280,0:14:21.480 and can get along with humans and other cats. This differs from dogs, the first domesticated 0:14:21.480,0:14:30.420 animals. Dogs were selectively bred for specific  tasks - which never applied to cats - and this 0:14:30.420,0:14:36.360 selection for specific traits led to the  diversification of dogs into many modern breeds. 0:14:38.160,0:14:45.300 Conclusion: The first high-resolution studies of  paleogenomes of domesticated animals suggest the 0:14:45.300,0:14:53.340 future of archaeogenetics of domestic animals.  They aim towards studies with high resolution in 0:14:53.340,0:15:00.000 time and space that will reveal the genetic  structure of animal domestication and the 0:15:00.000,0:15:06.180 physiological and neurobiological changes  that occur when domestic and social animals 0:15:06.180,0:15:13.020 come under human control and undergo long-term  reproductive management and artificial selection. 0:15:13.020,0:15:19.980 It is likely that high-resolution studies of  pre-domesticated and early animals' paleogenomes 0:15:20.540,0:15:26.160 will provide new important information about  interesting features of domesticated animals 0:15:26.160,0:15:31.380 and the domestication process. Thank you for your attention.