Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/22997
Title: The first mitochondrial survey on the current population of the Maltese cattle breed testifies a strong and significant founder effect and a maternal influence from Northern Europe
Authors: Cardinali, Irene
Lancioni, Hovirag
Lorenzo, Piera di
Ceccobelli, Simone
Rosario Capodiferro, Marco
Fichera, Alessandro
Gruppetta, Anthony
Attard, George
Lasagna, Emiliano
Achilli, Alessandro
Keywords: Animal breeds -- Malta
Cattle -- Malta
Cattle -- Breeding -- Malta
Cattle trade -- Malta
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: AGI
Citation: Cardinali, I., Lancioni, H., Di Piera, L., Ceccobelli, S., Rosario Capodiferro, M., Fichera, S.... & Achilli, A. (2015). The first mitochondrial survey on the current population of the Maltese cattle breed testifies a strong and significant founder effect and a maternal influence from Northern Europe. AGI 2015, Cortona.
Abstract: Local breeds represent an important and often unique pool of endangered sources of genetic variability, particularly when confined to an isolated geographic area. The Maltese breed of cattle is considered to be of ancient origin. Late Pleistocene Oxen skeletal remains and Neolithic representations of primitive cattle have been suggested as proof of a possible local domestication. The objective of the present study is to explore the current mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) diversity of this breed in order to reconstruct its maternal origins and to identify any residual genetic variants to be preserved. A mtDNA control-region analysis performed on the entire Maltese cattle population identified only two different mtDNAs (out of a total amount of 19 samples), one encompasses about 90% of the current population and confirms a strong founder effect on the mitochondrial gene pool; the remaining 10% seems to testify for the importation of British cattle, documented in historical records since 1809. The complete mtDNA has defined two novel clades T3c and T3d, both dated to ~9.5 thousand years ago, encompassing the Maltese breed and only a few other breeds of Northern European ancestry. This new piece of information does not support the hypothesis of a local domestication in Malta since the Maltese cattle mtDNAs are nested within the known domestic founding lineage T3, but confirms a strong maternal influence from Northern Europe rather than from the African coastline.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/22997
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