TY - JOUR
T1 - The genetic diversity of Indonesian cattle has been shaped by multiple introductions and adaptive introgression
AU - Wang, Xi
AU - Nursyifa, Casia
AU - Gita Aninta, Sabhrina
AU - Garcia-Erill, Genís
AU - Bertola, Laura D.
AU - Khan, Anubhab
AU - Kuja, Josiah
AU - Hanghøj, Kristian
AU - Meisner, Jonas
AU - Bøggild, Thomas
AU - Bradshaw, Corey J. A.
AU - Al-Chaer, Amal
AU - Putra Persada, Alam
AU - Sendi Priyono, Dwi
AU - Tribudi, Yuli A.
AU - Sudrajad, Pita
AU - Dewi Gaina, Cynthia
AU - Jiang, Yu
AU - Lenstra, Johannes A.
AU - Cauble-Sims, Reagan
AU - Rosen, Benjamin D.
AU - Hagen, Darren E.
AU - Heaton, Michael P.
AU - Smith, Timothy P. L.
AU - Frantz, Laurent
AU - Larson, Greger
AU - Sinding, Mikkel-Holger S.
AU - Duryadi Solihin, Dedy
AU - Agil, Muhammad
AU - Purwantara, Bambang
AU - Heller, Rasmus
PY - 2025/9/25
Y1 - 2025/9/25
N2 - Genetic diversity is a crucial resource in livestock, determining their traits and ability to respond to selection. Indonesian cattle are unique due to their history of admixture involving both zebu (Bos indicus) and banteng (B. javanicus), and may therefore contain novel cattle genetic resources. We generated whole genome sequences from 126 Indonesian cattle, 51 domesticated banteng and three captive banteng. We show that Indonesian cattle have very high genetic diversity, especially the Madura breed due to introgression from banteng and possibly other Bos species, contributing up to 36.6% of the Madura’s genome. We find that Indonesian zebu ancestry can be traced to at least three distinct ancestral populations, two of which were introduced more than 1345 years ago from mainland Southeast or eastern Asia. Peaks and valleys in banteng ancestry across the genome in admixed breeds suggest that both negative and positive selection act on introgressed haplotypes. Despite adaptive introgression being mainly breed-specific, we found evidence that some phenotypes, such as coat color, have experienced convergent adaptive introgression. Overall, our results provide insights into the historical movement of cattle in Asia, and showcase the potential for genetic improvement of cattle by identifying ~3.5 million novel SNPs introgressed into Indonesian cattle.
AB - Genetic diversity is a crucial resource in livestock, determining their traits and ability to respond to selection. Indonesian cattle are unique due to their history of admixture involving both zebu (Bos indicus) and banteng (B. javanicus), and may therefore contain novel cattle genetic resources. We generated whole genome sequences from 126 Indonesian cattle, 51 domesticated banteng and three captive banteng. We show that Indonesian cattle have very high genetic diversity, especially the Madura breed due to introgression from banteng and possibly other Bos species, contributing up to 36.6% of the Madura’s genome. We find that Indonesian zebu ancestry can be traced to at least three distinct ancestral populations, two of which were introduced more than 1345 years ago from mainland Southeast or eastern Asia. Peaks and valleys in banteng ancestry across the genome in admixed breeds suggest that both negative and positive selection act on introgressed haplotypes. Despite adaptive introgression being mainly breed-specific, we found evidence that some phenotypes, such as coat color, have experienced convergent adaptive introgression. Overall, our results provide insights into the historical movement of cattle in Asia, and showcase the potential for genetic improvement of cattle by identifying ~3.5 million novel SNPs introgressed into Indonesian cattle.
KW - genetics
KW - genomics
KW - cattle
KW - banteng
KW - Indonesia
KW - Bos
KW - Bos javanicus
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105017184790&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s41467-025-62692-z
DO - 10.1038/s41467-025-62692-z
M3 - Article
SN - 2041-1723
VL - 16
JO - Nature Communications
JF - Nature Communications
IS - 1
M1 - 8192
ER -