Genome-wide scan for commons SNPs affecting bovine leukemia virus infection level in dairy cattle

被引:21
作者
Carignano, Hugo A. [1 ]
Roldan, Dana L. [1 ]
Beribe, Maria J. [2 ]
Raschia, Maria A. [1 ]
Amadio, Ariel [3 ,4 ]
Nani, Juan P. [3 ]
Gutierrez, Geronimo
Alvarez, Irene [4 ,5 ]
Trono, Karina [5 ]
Poli, Mario A. [1 ]
Miretti, Marcos M. [4 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Inst Genet, INTA, CICVyA, B1686, Hurlingham, Argentina
[2] INTA, Estn Expt Agr Pergamino, B2700, Pergamino, Argentina
[3] INTA, Estn Expt Agr Rafaela, S2300, Rafaela, Argentina
[4] Consejo Nacl Invest Cient & Tecn, C1033AAJ, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina
[5] Inst Virol, INTA, CICVyA, B686, Hurlingham, Argentina
[6] Univ Nacl Misiones, GIGA, IBS, N3300, Posadas, Argentina
来源
BMC GENOMICS | 2018年 / 19卷
关键词
Bovine leukemia virus; Level of infection; Whole genome association study; TRIM FAMILY PROTEINS; VIRAL DIARRHEA VIRUS; LINKAGE-DISEQUILIBRIUM; PROVIRAL LOAD; PERSISTENT LYMPHOCYTOSIS; SUBCLINICAL PROGRESSION; MAJOR DETERMINANTS; LEUKOSIS INCIDENCE; NEOSPORA-CANINUM; HOLSTEIN CATTLE;
D O I
10.1186/s12864-018-4523-2
中图分类号
Q81 [生物工程学(生物技术)]; Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 0836 ; 090102 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Background: Bovine leukemia virus (BLV) infection is omnipresent in dairy herds causing direct economic losses due to trade restrictions and lymphosarcoma-related deaths. Milk production drops and increase in the culling rate are also relevant and usually neglected. The BLV provirus persists throughout a lifetime and an inter-individual variation is observed in the level of infection (LI) in vivo. High LI is strongly correlated with disease progression and BLV transmission among herd mates. In a context of high prevalence, classical control strategies are economically prohibitive. Alternatively, host genomics studies aiming to dissect loci associated with LI are potentially useful tools for genetic selection programs tending to abrogate the viral spreading. The LI was measured through the proviral load (PVL) set-point and white blood cells (WBC) counts. The goals of this work were to gain insight into the contribution of SNPs (bovine 50KSNP panel) on LI variability and to identify genomics regions underlying this trait. Results: We quantified anti-p24 response and total leukocytes count in peripheral blood from 1800 cows and used these to select 800 individuals with extreme phenotypes in WBCs and PVL. Two case-control genomic association studies using linear mixed models (LMMs) considering population stratification were performed. The proportion of the variance captured by all QC-passed SNPs represented 0.63 (SE +/- 0.14) of the phenotypic variance for PVL and 0. 56 (SE +/- 0.15) for WBCs. Overall, significant associations (Bonferroni's corrected -log(10)p > 5.94) were shared for both phenotypes by 24 SNPs within the Bovine MHC. Founder haplotypes were used to measure the linkage disequilibrium (LD) extent (r(2) = 0.22 +/- 0.27 at inter-SNP distance of 25-50 kb). The SNPs and LD blocks indicated genes potentially associated with LI in infected cows: i.e. relevant immune response related genes (DQA1, DRB3, BOLA-A, LTA, LTB, TNF, IER3, GRP111, CRISP1), several genes involved in cell cytoskeletal reorganization (CD2AP, PKHD1, FLOT1, TUBB5) and modelling of the extracellular matrix (TRAM2, TNXB). Host transcription factors (TFs) were also highlighted (TFAP2D; ABT1, GCM1, PRRC2A). Conclusions: Data obtained represent a step forward to understand the biology of BLV-bovine interaction, and provide genetic information potentially applicable to selective breeding programs.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
[31]   The influence of risk factors on bovine leukemia virus infection and proviral load in egyptian cattle [J].
Hamada, Rania ;
Fereig, Ragab M. ;
Metwally, Samy .
VETERINARY RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 2023,
[32]   Diagnostic Measures of Disease Progression in Cattle Following Natural Infection with Bovine Leukemia Virus [J].
Hutchinson, Holden C. ;
Ruggiero, Vickie J. ;
Norby, Bo ;
Sporer, Kelly R. B. ;
Bartlett, Paul C. .
PATHOGENS, 2021, 10 (08)
[33]   Using PCR for early diagnosis of bovine leukemia virus infection in some native cattle [J].
Mohammadabadi, M. R. ;
Soflaei, M. ;
Mostafavi, H. ;
Honarmand, M. .
GENETICS AND MOLECULAR RESEARCH, 2011, 10 (04) :2658-2663
[34]   SERO-PREVALENCE OF BOVINE LEUKEMIA VIRUS INFECTION IN KOSOVO CATTLE [J].
Gjinovci, Valdet ;
Cana, Armend ;
Alishani, Mentor ;
Mehmetukaj, Dafina ;
Taylor, Nick ;
Honhold, Naomi .
MACEDONIAN VETERINARY REVIEW, 2020, 43 (02) :175-183
[35]   The molecular epidemiological study of bovine leukemia virus infection in Myanmar cattle [J].
Meripet Polat ;
Hla Hla Moe ;
Takeshi Shimogiri ;
Kyaw Kyaw Moe ;
Shin-nosuke Takeshima ;
Yoko Aida .
Archives of Virology, 2017, 162 :425-437
[36]   Detection of Bovine Leukemia Virus RNA in Blood Samples of Naturally Infected Dairy Cattle [J].
Alvarez, Irene ;
Gabriela Porta, Natalia ;
Trono, Karina .
VETERINARY SCIENCES, 2019, 6 (03)
[37]   Effect of infection with bovine leukemia virus on milk production in Michigan dairy cows [J].
Norby, B. ;
Bartlett, P. C. ;
Byrem, T. M. ;
Erskine, R. J. .
JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2016, 99 (03) :2043-2052
[38]   Using Genome-Wide Association Analysis to Characterize Environmental Sensitivity of Milk Traits in Dairy Cattle [J].
Streit, Melanie ;
Wellmann, Robin ;
Reinhardt, Friedrich ;
Thaller, Georg ;
Piepho, Hans-Peter ;
Bennewitz, Joern .
G3-GENES GENOMES GENETICS, 2013, 3 (07) :1085-1093
[39]   Genome-wide association for milk production and female fertility traits in Canadian dairy Holstein cattle [J].
Nayeri, Shadi ;
Sargolzaei, Mehdi ;
Abo-Ismail, Mohammed K. ;
May, Natalie ;
Miller, Stephen P. ;
Schenkel, Flavio ;
Moore, Stephen S. ;
Stothard, Paul .
BMC GENETICS, 2016, 17
[40]   Genome-wide association for milk production and female fertility traits in Canadian dairy Holstein cattle [J].
Shadi Nayeri ;
Mehdi Sargolzaei ;
Mohammed K. Abo-Ismail ;
Natalie May ;
Stephen P. Miller ;
Flavio Schenkel ;
Stephen S. Moore ;
Paul Stothard .
BMC Genetics, 17