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Candidate Gene Approach for Parasite Resistance in Sheep – Variation in Immune Pathway Genes and Association with Fecal Egg Count

Sheep chromosome 3 (Oar3) has the largest number of QTLs reported to be significantly associated with resistance to gastro-intestinal nematodes. This study aimed to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within candidate genes located in sheep chromosome 3 as well as genes involved in major...

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Autores principales: Periasamy, Kathiravan, Pichler, Rudolf, Poli, Mario, Cristel, Silvina, Cetrá, Bibiana, Medus, Daniel, Basar, Muladno, A. K., Thiruvenkadan, Ramasamy, Saravanan, Ellahi, Masroor Babbar, Mohammed, Faruque, Teneva, Atanaska, Shamsuddin, Mohammed, Podesta, Mario Garcia, Diallo, Adama
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3922807/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24533078
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088337
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author Periasamy, Kathiravan
Pichler, Rudolf
Poli, Mario
Cristel, Silvina
Cetrá, Bibiana
Medus, Daniel
Basar, Muladno
A. K., Thiruvenkadan
Ramasamy, Saravanan
Ellahi, Masroor Babbar
Mohammed, Faruque
Teneva, Atanaska
Shamsuddin, Mohammed
Podesta, Mario Garcia
Diallo, Adama
author_facet Periasamy, Kathiravan
Pichler, Rudolf
Poli, Mario
Cristel, Silvina
Cetrá, Bibiana
Medus, Daniel
Basar, Muladno
A. K., Thiruvenkadan
Ramasamy, Saravanan
Ellahi, Masroor Babbar
Mohammed, Faruque
Teneva, Atanaska
Shamsuddin, Mohammed
Podesta, Mario Garcia
Diallo, Adama
author_sort Periasamy, Kathiravan
collection PubMed
description Sheep chromosome 3 (Oar3) has the largest number of QTLs reported to be significantly associated with resistance to gastro-intestinal nematodes. This study aimed to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within candidate genes located in sheep chromosome 3 as well as genes involved in major immune pathways. A total of 41 SNPs were identified across 38 candidate genes in a panel of unrelated sheep and genotyped in 713 animals belonging to 22 breeds across Asia, Europe and South America. The variations and evolution of immune pathway genes were assessed in sheep populations across these macro-environmental regions that significantly differ in the diversity and load of pathogens. The mean minor allele frequency (MAF) did not vary between Asian and European sheep reflecting the absence of ascertainment bias. Phylogenetic analysis revealed two major clusters with most of South Asian, South East Asian and South West Asian breeds clustering together while European and South American sheep breeds clustered together distinctly. Analysis of molecular variance revealed strong phylogeographic structure at loci located in immune pathway genes, unlike microsatellite and genome wide SNP markers. To understand the influence of natural selection processes, SNP loci located in chromosome 3 were utilized to reconstruct haplotypes, the diversity of which showed significant deviations from selective neutrality. Reduced Median network of reconstructed haplotypes showed balancing selection in force at these loci. Preliminary association of SNP genotypes with phenotypes recorded 42 days post challenge revealed significant differences (P<0.05) in fecal egg count, body weight change and packed cell volume at two, four and six SNP loci respectively. In conclusion, the present study reports strong phylogeographic structure and balancing selection operating at SNP loci located within immune pathway genes. Further, SNP loci identified in the study were found to have potential for future large scale association studies in naturally exposed sheep populations.
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spelling pubmed-39228072014-02-14 Candidate Gene Approach for Parasite Resistance in Sheep – Variation in Immune Pathway Genes and Association with Fecal Egg Count Periasamy, Kathiravan Pichler, Rudolf Poli, Mario Cristel, Silvina Cetrá, Bibiana Medus, Daniel Basar, Muladno A. K., Thiruvenkadan Ramasamy, Saravanan Ellahi, Masroor Babbar Mohammed, Faruque Teneva, Atanaska Shamsuddin, Mohammed Podesta, Mario Garcia Diallo, Adama PLoS One Research Article Sheep chromosome 3 (Oar3) has the largest number of QTLs reported to be significantly associated with resistance to gastro-intestinal nematodes. This study aimed to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within candidate genes located in sheep chromosome 3 as well as genes involved in major immune pathways. A total of 41 SNPs were identified across 38 candidate genes in a panel of unrelated sheep and genotyped in 713 animals belonging to 22 breeds across Asia, Europe and South America. The variations and evolution of immune pathway genes were assessed in sheep populations across these macro-environmental regions that significantly differ in the diversity and load of pathogens. The mean minor allele frequency (MAF) did not vary between Asian and European sheep reflecting the absence of ascertainment bias. Phylogenetic analysis revealed two major clusters with most of South Asian, South East Asian and South West Asian breeds clustering together while European and South American sheep breeds clustered together distinctly. Analysis of molecular variance revealed strong phylogeographic structure at loci located in immune pathway genes, unlike microsatellite and genome wide SNP markers. To understand the influence of natural selection processes, SNP loci located in chromosome 3 were utilized to reconstruct haplotypes, the diversity of which showed significant deviations from selective neutrality. Reduced Median network of reconstructed haplotypes showed balancing selection in force at these loci. Preliminary association of SNP genotypes with phenotypes recorded 42 days post challenge revealed significant differences (P<0.05) in fecal egg count, body weight change and packed cell volume at two, four and six SNP loci respectively. In conclusion, the present study reports strong phylogeographic structure and balancing selection operating at SNP loci located within immune pathway genes. Further, SNP loci identified in the study were found to have potential for future large scale association studies in naturally exposed sheep populations. Public Library of Science 2014-02-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3922807/ /pubmed/24533078 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088337 Text en © 2014 Periasamy et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Periasamy, Kathiravan
Pichler, Rudolf
Poli, Mario
Cristel, Silvina
Cetrá, Bibiana
Medus, Daniel
Basar, Muladno
A. K., Thiruvenkadan
Ramasamy, Saravanan
Ellahi, Masroor Babbar
Mohammed, Faruque
Teneva, Atanaska
Shamsuddin, Mohammed
Podesta, Mario Garcia
Diallo, Adama
Candidate Gene Approach for Parasite Resistance in Sheep – Variation in Immune Pathway Genes and Association with Fecal Egg Count
title Candidate Gene Approach for Parasite Resistance in Sheep – Variation in Immune Pathway Genes and Association with Fecal Egg Count
title_full Candidate Gene Approach for Parasite Resistance in Sheep – Variation in Immune Pathway Genes and Association with Fecal Egg Count
title_fullStr Candidate Gene Approach for Parasite Resistance in Sheep – Variation in Immune Pathway Genes and Association with Fecal Egg Count
title_full_unstemmed Candidate Gene Approach for Parasite Resistance in Sheep – Variation in Immune Pathway Genes and Association with Fecal Egg Count
title_short Candidate Gene Approach for Parasite Resistance in Sheep – Variation in Immune Pathway Genes and Association with Fecal Egg Count
title_sort candidate gene approach for parasite resistance in sheep – variation in immune pathway genes and association with fecal egg count
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3922807/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24533078
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088337
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