The skull of the Indian aurochs in profile view is at the bottom right; a cross section of the horn with the keels can be seen at fig. 6 |
"Breeding-back" aims to restore or immitate extinct animals by selective breeding. This blog provides general information, the facts behind myths and news from various projects.
Tuesday, 31 May 2022
Two zebus with traits of the Indian aurochs
Monday, 23 May 2022
Bos primigenius trochoceros?
The species of the aurochs, Bos primigenius, has many synonyms – last time I counted it was 8, counting only those that are based on wildtype material and there might be more (with those based on cattle there would be much more). One of those synonyms is Bos trochoceros, a species which was described for Pleistocene European aurochs. However, as the differences between Pleistocene European aurochs and Holocene European aurochs is not dramatic enough to justify a split on species level, it has been synonymized decades ago. But what about subspecies level? Might it be justified to classify Pleistocene European aurochs as Bos primigenius trochoceros?
There were differences in the morphology of Pleistocene and Holocene European aurochs. First of all, the former reached very large sizes of 200 cm withers height or more, while individuals from the Middle and Late Holocene were smaller (what was most likely due to anthropogenic factors). It also had – on average – considerably larger and more wide-ranging horns as the horn size of Holocene aurochs was decreasing and also the curvature was narrower (with large-horned Holocene individuals such as the Sassenberg bull being exceptions) throughout this period. The coat colour, however, was seemingly identical between Pleistocene and Holocene European aurochs, as a comparison between cave paintings and historic texts suggest. The question if the differences in body size and horn size are enough for a split on subspecies level is not easy to answer, as taxonomy is rather subjective – what is distinct enough for one worker is not distinct enough for the other.
However, genetic information might endorse a split on subspecies level. Southern European aurochs (at least Italian ones) have the mitochondrial haplotype T which is also found in taurine cattle (hence the “T”), while those from the Northern half of Europe have the haplotype P (from “primigenius”). Southern Europe was a refuge for the aurochs during the last glacial, when the mammoth steppe covered most of its former range in Europe. The different haplotype of northern aurochs suggest that Europe was recolonized from the East rather than from the South after the last glacial [1]. So, there is a genetic difference between Southern and Northern European aurochs, and it must be noted that during the Pleistocene the range was restricted to Southern Europe. A Pleistocene aurochs skull from Germany with massive and wide-ranging horns - Bos primigenius trochoceros?
As it happens, Bos trochoceros is based on a Pleistocene skull from Siena, Italy [2]. And Bos primigenius is based on a Holocene skeleton from Haßleben in Germany, thus the northern half of Europe. Doesn’t that fit nicely? So, can we say that Bos primigenius primigenius represents only the Central and Northern European aurochs from the Holocene, that migrated from the East to Europe after the last glacial and have the P haplotpye, and that Bos primigenius trochocerosrepresents the Southern European aurochs that were slightly larger, had larger and more wide-ranging horns, were present in Europe during the last glacial and all had the T haplotype? I don’t consider this assumption all too absurd. We also have to consider that there likely was a continuum between both forms, as their range was continuous during the Holocene (similar as in the case of Canis lupus lupus and Canis lupus italicus). Not all Holocene aurochs with the P haplotype had smaller horns (see the Sassenberg specimen) and not all of them were smaller than Pleistocene Southern European ones (see the Prejlerup specimen which might have been around 195 cm tall in life).
It seems that I am not the only one who considers the use of the trinominal name Bos primigenius trochoceros legitimate. The name has been used in a 2020 paper and a 1995 work for Middle Pleistocene aurochs remains in France [3,4].
If a split on subspecies level within the European aurochs was legitimate, this also would have consequences for the evolution of cattle. Since Southern European aurochs have the T haplotype, Near Eastern aurochs in the fertile crescent from 10.000 years ago that were the ancestors of taurine cattle, likely had the same haplotype. Quite possibly, the populations were connected at some point, and most likely the aurochs entered Southern Europe via Anatolia. Therefore, it is likely that Near Eastern aurochs from that time can be or must be considered Bos primigenius trochoceros too. That means taurine cattle were not domesticated from the nominate subspecies, Bos primigenius primigenius. Nevertheless, B. p. primigenius in this strict sense left a lot of living descendants because of secondary introgression into cattle in Europe (go here).
I consider this split on subspecies level at least possible – I am very open for the possibility that trochoceros rises from the grave of the junior synonyms thanks to genetic and morphological information. We would have five mainland subspecies of the aurochs in this case: the Northern European aurochs Bos primigenius primigenius, the Southern European (and possibly Near Eastern) aurochs Bos primigenius trochoceros, the North African aurochs Bos primigenius mauretanicus, the Indian aurochs Bos primigenius namadicus, and the East-Asian aurochs Bos primigenius suxianensis. I am also convinced that this would not be over-splitting as other bovines with a large geographical range such as the cape buffalo which is divided into two to three subspecies (depending on the status of Syncerus nanus), and this includes only those that live today in the late Holocene. The aurochs simply was a species with a large geographical range over a comparably long period of time, which goes hand in hand with the evolution of several subtypes.
Literature
[1] Mona et al.: Population dynamic of the extinct European aurochs: genetic evidence from a north-south differentiation pattern and no evidence of post-glacial expansion. 2010.
[2] Rütimeyer: Überreste von Büffeln (Bubalus) aus den quaternären Ablagerungen von Europa. 1870.
[3] Uzunidis: Dental wear analyses of Middle Pleistocene site of Lunel-Viel (Herault, France): did Equus and Bos live in a wetland? 2020.
[4] Tuffreau et al.: Le gisement acheuleen de cagny-l’epinette (somme). 1995.
Thursday, 19 May 2022
Genome editing for "breeding-back" the aurochs
First of all, only a handful of genes responsible for the phenotypic characters of interest in cattle have been resolved. For example, we know that a brindle coat colour is caused by a dominant allele on the Agouti locus, that the polled condition is caused by a dominant allele on the Polled locus, and the three alleles on the Extension locus and aggression in cattle is probably influenced by the MAOA locus (go here). But we have no clue which alleles are responsible for horn size or curvature, the various colour dilutions we see in Podolian cattle and Chianina (which are used in “breeding-back”), the size of the hump, the sexual dichromatism and many other traits. And some traits, such as body size, proportions and other morphological traits (which make up the most important differences between cattle and aurochs) are likely controlled by hundreds of genes or even more (cattle have 22.000 genes). Therefore, a lot of research would have to be done in order to use genome editing efficiently for “breeding-back” an imitation of the aurochs.
Genetic linkage is kind of an argument pro and contra genome editing in “breeding-back” at the same time. It is possible that some morphological/optical aurochs-like traits are linked to wildtype traits with other functions (for example immunological, developmental, physiological). If the wildtype allele(s) for a certain morphological trait is inserted into another genome with genome editing instead of being introduced with traditional breeding, the wildtype allele for non-visible characteristics would not be transferred to the new genome. This is a scenario where genome editing would not be beneficial for the goal (to have as much wildtype alleles as possible) and where traditional breeding would be more effective. However, the opposite scenario would be equally as likely, that some wildtype alleles are genetically linked with domestic alleles on the same chromosome. If the wildtype allele and the domestic allele lie close together on the chromosome, it is not only impossible to get rid of the domestic allele without also losing the wildtype allele but it is also very unlikely that the linkage is ended by recombination. In this case, genome editing would be beneficial: the domestic allele could be cut out and replaced with a wildtype allele from the same locus from another cattle breed that still has the wildtype allele. This is the scenario where genome editing would be highly beneficial for “breeding-back”, and I believe this is what the Uruz Project was referring to when they said they want to use this technique. However, as outlined above, as long as the alleles responsible for the phenotypic traits of relevance, it is not possible to use genome editing for “breeding-back” effectively.
This is where the fully resolved aurochs genome that was resolved in 2015 from a British Neolithic aurochs bull comes into play. So far, no particular gene has been identified that played a considerable role in the domestication of the aurochs. In horses, two such genes have been identified: one influencing the ability of the animals to bear weight on their back, and one influencing fear response and docility (here). If the same work was done for the aurochs, one could take these genes in the genome of modern cattle (preferably cattle that are already aurochs-like, not Holstein-Frisian) and replace their domestic alleles on these important loci and replace them with alleles taken from the aurochs individual. It has also been found that zebus have some wildtype alleles that were replaced by domestic alleles in domestic cattle (here). These could also be replaced by aurochs alleles in an aurochs-like cattle individual. This modification of the genotype of an already aurochs-like taurine cattle individual would be a reintroduction of organismic wildtype traits that could be very beneficial for the cattle’s survival in nature under natural selection (be it immunological, developmental, physiological, genomic by the removal of deleterious domestic alleles, morphological or behavioural).
I think it might be possible (though more effortful) to go one step further: replacing all the domestic allele of an aurochs-like taurine cattle individual with those of the aurochs. The result would basically be a recreated aurochs. It would not be a recreation of the original genetic diversity of the wildtype, but at least one individual. As an aurochs enthusiast, I would of course love this scenario. But if that is not possible for technical reasons, even the reintroduction of single wildtype alleles that are lost in modern cattle would already be a success. I really hope that someone one day is going to try it (what would require the “the aurochs can be bred back anyway” mentality to finally disappear).