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Characterisation of five candidate genes within the ETEC F4ab/ac candidate region in pigs

BACKGROUND: Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) that express the F4ab and F4ac fimbriae is a major contributor to diarrhoea outbreaks in the pig breeding industry, infecting both newborn and weaned piglets. Some pigs are resistant to this infection, and susceptibility is inherited as a simple do...

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Autores principales: Jacobsen, Mette, Cirera, Susanna, Joller, David, Esteso, Gloria, Kracht, Steffen S, Edfors, Inger, Bendixen, Christian, Archibald, Alan L, Vogeli, Peter, Neuenschwander, Stefan, Bertschinger, Hans U, Rampoldi, Antonio, Andersson, Leif, Fredholm, Merete, Jørgensen, Claus B
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3160978/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21718470
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-4-225
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author Jacobsen, Mette
Cirera, Susanna
Joller, David
Esteso, Gloria
Kracht, Steffen S
Edfors, Inger
Bendixen, Christian
Archibald, Alan L
Vogeli, Peter
Neuenschwander, Stefan
Bertschinger, Hans U
Rampoldi, Antonio
Andersson, Leif
Fredholm, Merete
Jørgensen, Claus B
author_facet Jacobsen, Mette
Cirera, Susanna
Joller, David
Esteso, Gloria
Kracht, Steffen S
Edfors, Inger
Bendixen, Christian
Archibald, Alan L
Vogeli, Peter
Neuenschwander, Stefan
Bertschinger, Hans U
Rampoldi, Antonio
Andersson, Leif
Fredholm, Merete
Jørgensen, Claus B
author_sort Jacobsen, Mette
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) that express the F4ab and F4ac fimbriae is a major contributor to diarrhoea outbreaks in the pig breeding industry, infecting both newborn and weaned piglets. Some pigs are resistant to this infection, and susceptibility is inherited as a simple dominant Mendelian trait. Indentifying the genetics behind this trait will greatly benefit pig welfare as well as the pig breeding industry by providing an opportunity to select against genetically susceptible animals, thereby reducing the number of diarrhoea outbreaks. The trait has recently been mapped by haplotype sharing to a 2.5 Mb region on pig chromosome 13, a region containing 18 annotated genes. FINDINGS: The coding regions of five candidate genes for susceptibility to ETEC F4ab/ac infection (TFRC, ACK1, MUC20, MUC4 and KIAA0226), all located in the 2.5 Mb region, were investigated for the presence of possible causative mutations. A total of 34 polymorphisms were identified in either coding regions or their flanking introns. The genotyping data for two of those were found to perfectly match the genotypes at the ETEC F4ab/ac locus, a G to C polymorphism in intron 11 of TFRC and a C to T silent polymorphism in exon 22 of KIAA0226. Transcriptional profiles of the five genes were investigated in a porcine tissue panel including various intestinal tissues. All five genes were expressed in intestinal tissues at different levels but none of the genes were found differentially expressed between ETEC F4ab/ac resistant and ETEC F4ab/ac susceptible animals in any of the tested tissues. CONCLUSIONS: None of the identified polymorphisms are obvious causative mutations for ETEC F4ab/ac susceptibility, as they have no impact on the level of the overall mRNA expression nor predicted to influence the composition of the amino acids composition. However, we cannot exclude that the five tested genes are bona fide candidate genes for susceptibility to ETEC F4ab/ac infection since the identified polymorphism might affect the translational apparatus, alternative splice forms may exist and post translational mechanisms might contribute to disease susceptibility.
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spelling pubmed-31609782011-08-25 Characterisation of five candidate genes within the ETEC F4ab/ac candidate region in pigs Jacobsen, Mette Cirera, Susanna Joller, David Esteso, Gloria Kracht, Steffen S Edfors, Inger Bendixen, Christian Archibald, Alan L Vogeli, Peter Neuenschwander, Stefan Bertschinger, Hans U Rampoldi, Antonio Andersson, Leif Fredholm, Merete Jørgensen, Claus B BMC Res Notes Short Report BACKGROUND: Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) that express the F4ab and F4ac fimbriae is a major contributor to diarrhoea outbreaks in the pig breeding industry, infecting both newborn and weaned piglets. Some pigs are resistant to this infection, and susceptibility is inherited as a simple dominant Mendelian trait. Indentifying the genetics behind this trait will greatly benefit pig welfare as well as the pig breeding industry by providing an opportunity to select against genetically susceptible animals, thereby reducing the number of diarrhoea outbreaks. The trait has recently been mapped by haplotype sharing to a 2.5 Mb region on pig chromosome 13, a region containing 18 annotated genes. FINDINGS: The coding regions of five candidate genes for susceptibility to ETEC F4ab/ac infection (TFRC, ACK1, MUC20, MUC4 and KIAA0226), all located in the 2.5 Mb region, were investigated for the presence of possible causative mutations. A total of 34 polymorphisms were identified in either coding regions or their flanking introns. The genotyping data for two of those were found to perfectly match the genotypes at the ETEC F4ab/ac locus, a G to C polymorphism in intron 11 of TFRC and a C to T silent polymorphism in exon 22 of KIAA0226. Transcriptional profiles of the five genes were investigated in a porcine tissue panel including various intestinal tissues. All five genes were expressed in intestinal tissues at different levels but none of the genes were found differentially expressed between ETEC F4ab/ac resistant and ETEC F4ab/ac susceptible animals in any of the tested tissues. CONCLUSIONS: None of the identified polymorphisms are obvious causative mutations for ETEC F4ab/ac susceptibility, as they have no impact on the level of the overall mRNA expression nor predicted to influence the composition of the amino acids composition. However, we cannot exclude that the five tested genes are bona fide candidate genes for susceptibility to ETEC F4ab/ac infection since the identified polymorphism might affect the translational apparatus, alternative splice forms may exist and post translational mechanisms might contribute to disease susceptibility. BioMed Central 2011-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC3160978/ /pubmed/21718470 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-4-225 Text en Copyright ©2011 Jacobsen et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Short Report
Jacobsen, Mette
Cirera, Susanna
Joller, David
Esteso, Gloria
Kracht, Steffen S
Edfors, Inger
Bendixen, Christian
Archibald, Alan L
Vogeli, Peter
Neuenschwander, Stefan
Bertschinger, Hans U
Rampoldi, Antonio
Andersson, Leif
Fredholm, Merete
Jørgensen, Claus B
Characterisation of five candidate genes within the ETEC F4ab/ac candidate region in pigs
title Characterisation of five candidate genes within the ETEC F4ab/ac candidate region in pigs
title_full Characterisation of five candidate genes within the ETEC F4ab/ac candidate region in pigs
title_fullStr Characterisation of five candidate genes within the ETEC F4ab/ac candidate region in pigs
title_full_unstemmed Characterisation of five candidate genes within the ETEC F4ab/ac candidate region in pigs
title_short Characterisation of five candidate genes within the ETEC F4ab/ac candidate region in pigs
title_sort characterisation of five candidate genes within the etec f4ab/ac candidate region in pigs
topic Short Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3160978/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21718470
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-4-225
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