Comparative genome-wide analysis of Ovis aries in Saudi Arabia highlighting inbreeding and genetic isolation of the Najdi sheep breed
Abdulrahman K. Aldawish, Mohanad A. Ibrahim, Faisal M. Alsubaie, Quaiser Saquib, Mohammed Fahad Albeshr

TL;DR
This study analyzes the genetic diversity of three Saudi Arabian sheep breeds, finding that Najdi sheep are highly inbred and genetically isolated.
Contribution
The study provides genome-wide insights into the inbreeding and genetic isolation of the Najdi sheep breed in Saudi Arabia.
Findings
Najdi sheep showed the highest inbreeding levels compared to Naemi and Harri breeds.
Genetic differentiation between Najdi and Naemi was confirmed using Wright’s fixation index (FST).
336 high-FST SNPs were identified, representing breed-specific genetic signatures.
Abstract
Sheep (Ovis aries) farming through traditional practices plays a vital role in the socio-economic development of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA). Genetic relationships among KSA sheep breeds remain poorly characterized. In this study, we performed a comparative genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis of three sheep breeds (Najdi, Naemi, and Harri) to evaluate their genetic diversity. Blood samples from 95 individuals were genotyped using OvineSNP50 BeadChip, generating 34,026 high-quality SNPs. Minor allele frequency (MAF) distribution revealed the highest genetic diversity in Naemi, followed by Harri and Najdi. The run of homozygosity (ROH)-based inbreeding coefficient (FROH) identified Najdi as the most inbred (FROH = 0.053), indicating its historical isolation, while Naemi displayed minimal recent inbreeding (FROH = 0.003). The heterozygosity-based inbreeding…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetic diversity and population structure · Genetic and phenotypic traits in livestock · melanin and skin pigmentation
