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Integrated mitogenome and Y chromosome analysis untangles the complex origin of African pigs

  • Lameck A. Odongo
  • , Adeniyi C. Adeola*
  • , George M. Msalya
  • , Olawale F. Olaniyan
  • , Ruth N. Njuki
  • , David H. Mauki
  • , Emmanuel K. Ndiema
  • , Xian Shi
  • , Zheng Fei Cai
  • , Ting Ting Yin
  • , Yuhua Fu
  • , Xiaolei Liu
  • , Shuhong Zhao
  • , Chabi A.M.S. Djagoun
  • , Pam D. Luka
  • , Ndifor K. Wanzie
  • , George Niba
  • , Olufunke O. Oluwole
  • , Sunday C. Olaogun
  • , Oladipo Omotosho
  • Oscar J. Sanke, Elliot Greiner, Victor M.O. Okoro, Ofelia G. Omitogun, Philip M. Dawuda, Antoine Souron, Hai Bing Xie, Bernard Agwanda, Joram M. Mwacharo, Richard P. Bishop, Jian Lin Han*, Min Sheng Peng*, Ya Ping Zhang*
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

The genetic history of African indigenous pigs remains poorly documented due to scarce archaeological and genomic data. Here, we analyzed 473 mitogenomes and 202 Y chromosome sequences from indigenous pigs in Africa, alongside 901 published mitogenomes and 715 Y chromosome sequences from Eurasian pigs and wild boars. Our results reveal that African pigs predominantly descend from European (haplogroup E, 44.8%) and East Asian (haplogroup D, 53.3%) lineages. Interestingly, there was a novel detection of Asian wild boar haplogroup A∗ (1.9%) in Tanzania. This pattern is congruent with that of Y chromosome analysis. Further maternal analyses confirm a genetic link between western African and Iberian pigs dating to about 4.5 ka, and dispersal into eastern Africa coinciding with the Bantu expansion around 2 ka. Our findings demonstrate complex human-mediated dispersal routes, highlighting the role of Bantu societies in shaping the genetic architecture of African indigenous pigs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number114252
Number of pages18
JournaliScience
Volume29
Issue number1
Early online date27 Nov 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPrint publication - 16 Jan 2026

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s)

Keywords

  • evolutionary ecology
  • evolutionary history
  • genomics

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