Project description:The genetic foundation of chicken tail feather color is not very well studied to date, though that of body feather color is extensively explored. In the present study, we used a synthetic chicken dwarf line (DW), which was originated from the hybrids between a black tail chicken breed, Rhode Island Red (RIR) and a white tail breed, Dwarf Layer (DL), to understand the genetic rules of the white/black tail color. The DW line still contain the individuals with black or white tails, even if the body feather are predominantly red, after more than ten generation of self-crossing and being selected for the body feather color. We firstly performed four crosses using the DW line chickens including black tail male to female, reciprocal crosses between the black and white, and white male to female to elucidate the inheritance pattern of the white/black tail. We found that (i) the white/black tail feather colors are independent of body feather color and (ii) the phenotype are autosomal simple trait and (iii) the white are dominant to the black in the DW lines. Furtherly, we performed a genome-wide association (GWA) analysis to determine the candidate genomic regions underlying the tail feather color by using black tail chickens from the RIR and DW chickens and white individuals from DW lines.
Project description:Different chicken breeds exhibit distinct muscle phenotypes resulting from selective breeding, but little is known about the molecular mechanisms responsible for this phenotypic difference. Skeletal muscle is composed of a large number of heterogeneous cell populations. Differences in differentiation and interaction of cell populations play a key role in the difference of skeletal muscle phenotype. Here, skeletal muscle single-cell RNA sequencing in three developmental stages was performed on Daheng broiler (cultivated breed) and Tibetan chicken (native breed).