About this Research Topic
This Research Topic focuses on the genetic basis of early domestication and artificial selection of animals and their effects on breed formation and phenotypic diversity. The intention of this Topic is to unravel the spatial and temporal histories of the appearance and spread of domesticated animals in a unique and unprecedented way, including molecular biology, population genetics, evolutionary biology, ancient DNA, epigenetics, etc. This Topic also tries to uncover the genetic basis for some biological characteristics that make animal apt to be domesticated. Beyond that, we would like to examine the genetic regulation underlying characteristics such as domestic animal behavior, biorhythm, nervous system, growth, production performance, etc., which contribute to genomic adaption, domestication, and selection. Finally, several functional selection signals/breeding markers contributing to phenotypic differentiation and practical breeding are expected to be determined by population genetics, functional genomics, and any other appropriate methodologies. In summary, the goal of this Research Topic is to collect extensive genetic evidence and address questions of when, where, why, and how extant animals have been domesticated.
Original Research and Review papers on the following themes are welcome:
• Genetic evidence for the time, place, or species origin of domestic animals.
• Genetic determination of early domestication.
• Identification of genomic selection signals and selective sweeps that have contributed to the long-term domestication and selection in the modern breeds.
• Genetic contributions of coding mutations to phenotypic differentiation and environmental adaptation of domestic animals.
• Transcriptional regulatory elements and epigenetic modifications driving genomic adaptive to domestication and selection of domesticated animals.
• Genomic analyses on animal inbreeding and the genetic load of domesticated populations and their wild relative species.
• Application of functional breeding markers that contribute to the practical breeding system by multiple means.
Keywords: animal, domestication, artificial selection, breed formation, adaptive evolution
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.