In 2015, Rewilding Europe published a PDF with a Nei distance chart showing the purported distance of 34 European cattle breeds to the one resolved aurochs genome. Many thought that we finally know which cattle breeds are genetically closest to the aurochs. But interpreting the chart that way would be a huge oversimplification and, in my opinion, inacurrate. In fact, I think we do not know anything more now than we knew before the Nei distance chart. With this post, I want to give my reasons for why I think that. Mind that I am not a geneticist, so this is completely my own interpretation. Critique is much appreciated.
The Nei distance chart published by Rewilding Europe |
1. The Nei distance analysis looked at only a very small fraction of the genome
The cattle genome has 3 billion base pairs, the Nei distance analysis looked at 700.000 base pairs. Precisely, the analysis studied single nucleotid polymorphisms (SNPs). 700.000 SNPs is certainly a lot, but only a very small fraction of the total genome, thus it does not tell us much about the genetic closeness of the cattle breeds to the aurochs. With another 700.000 SNPs the results could be completely different.
3. Only one aurochs genome was used for the analysis
We have only one resolved complete aurochs genome for now, which is a problem for trying to analyse the genetic closeness of cattle breeds to their wildtype. It is unlikely (or actually impossible) that one individual comprised the full genetic diversity found in the wildtype populations, thus there must have been wildtype alleles found in other aurochs but not found in this one particular individual. The problem is that these wildtype alleles would be considered domestic alleles if found in a modern cattle individual and not found in the one aurochs individual that had its genome resolved. It could be the case that Caldela, a breed scoring very low on the chart, actually has a lot of wildtype alleles that just happen to be from other aurochs individuals than that of the one genome that we have, and so it results scoring low in the chart. That relativizes the relevance of the Nei distance analysis considerably.
4. Nei distance might not be the ideal tool for analysing the situation of aurochs and cattle
The Nei distance was developed for populations that diverged by mutation and genetic drift in isolated populations. But this is not the scenario that happened in the case of aurochs and cattle. In the domestication of cattle, we have at first drastic genetic bottleneck (since modern domestic cattle go back to only about 80 female founders), then massive directive selection (selection on tameness and economic value) during which many wildtype alleles might have been lost and mutated (= domestic) alleles became fixed, then we have local introgression from different types of aurochs in different regions of the world into the cattle genome (in Africa and Europe at least). Not to forget the not uncommon intermixing between taurine and indicine cattle, which descend from two rather divergent aurochs subspecies.
That is why I have covered the Nei distance chart in only one post on my blog till now. I think it does not tell us much about the actual genetic distance between the aurochs and domestic cattle breeds. That is why the score in the chart seems to be rather coincidental and there is no correlation between a less-derived phenotype and the purported genetic closeness to that one aurochs individual analysed in the chart. For example, Fleckvieh scores higher than the Spanish fighting bull. Of course, it can be possible that a breed that has a rather derived morphology shares more alleles with the aurochs than one with a less-derived morphology, since many of the differences between aurochs and cattle might be non-visible, for example immunology, development, endocrinology, neurology, metabolism, or physiological aspects. But I consider it highly unlikely to be the case with Lidia and Fleckvieh, because Fleckvieh has experienced far more intense selective breeding than the Spanish fighting bull. Their score in the Nei distance chart is not evidence for that either, as outlined above.
Furthermore, which aurochs are “the aurochs”? Even if we only care about the primigenius subspecies it is complicated to give an answer to that question. British cattle landraces have been found to share nuclear alleles with the British aurochs, likely due to introgression, which we cannot expect for Iberian, Italian or Near Eastern breeds and vice versa.
Also, the total genetic closeness to the aurochs does not tell us which alleles are present in which breed, which is crucial information if one wants to unite aurochs alleles in one population with selective breeding. A breed scoring low in the overall genetic closeness to the aurochs might have alleles which all the other breeds do not have, and this is exactly the case in this Nei chart: Nelore, as an incidine breed, will share alleles with the British aurochs which taurine cattle have lost, because this is what was found by Orlando et al. 2015 (by the way, if the Tauros Programme is indeed aiming for breeding for “aurochs alleles”, why aren’t they breeding with zebus? There is no other way to get these alleles into the population. The answer is: Because they are not breeding on a genetic level, contrary to what they claim in press releases…).
Thus, I think that this Nei distance chart does not tell us anything of value for “breeding-back”. Why did the Tauros Programme conduct this analysis, then? I think that’s because they needed to publish something “genetic”, in order to back up their claims that they are breeding for aurochs-like genetics. The project was very content with the results of the chart. They claimed that the breeds used in their project were particularly high-ranking. As you can see in the chart (the Tauros Programme breeds are those written in bold), this is not necessarily the case. Their breeds seem to be rather evenly distributed along the chart. However, this is not relevant for “breeding-back” anyway, at least in my opinion, for the reasons outlined in this post.
Literature
Orlando, L.: The first aurochs genome reveals the breeding history of British and European cattle. 2015.