The Roslin Institute and Royal Dick School of Veterinary Studies, University of Edinburgh, Roslin, Midlothian, EH25 9PS, UK.
Genet Sel Evol. 2009 Dec 30;41(1):54. doi: 10.1186/1297-9686-41-54.
There is a need for genetic markers or biomarkers that can predict resistance towards a wide range of infectious diseases, especially within a health environment typical of commercial farms. Such markers also need to be heritable under these conditions and ideally correlate with commercial performance traits. In this study, we estimated the heritabilities of a wide range of immune traits, as potential biomarkers, and measured their relationship with performance within both specific pathogen-free (SPF) and non-SPF environments. Immune traits were measured in 674 SPF pigs and 606 non-SPF pigs, which were subsets of the populations for which we had performance measurements (average daily gain), viz. 1549 SPF pigs and 1093 non-SPF pigs. Immune traits measured included total and differential white blood cell counts, peripheral blood mononuclear leucocyte (PBML) subsets (CD4+ cells, total CD8alpha+ cells, classical CD8alphabeta+ cells, CD11R1+ cells (CD8alpha+ and CD8alpha-), B cells, monocytes and CD16+ cells) and acute phase proteins (alpha-1 acid glycoprotein (AGP), haptoglobin, C-reactive protein (CRP) and transthyretin). Nearly all traits tested were heritable regardless of health status, although the heritability estimate for average daily gain was lower under non-SPF conditions. There were also negative genetic correlations between performance and the following immune traits: CD11R1+ cells, monocytes and the acute phase protein AGP. The strength of the association between performance and AGP was not affected by health status. However, negative genetic correlations were only apparent between performance and monocytes under SPF conditions and between performance and CD11R1+ cells under non-SPF conditions. Although we cannot infer causality in these relationships, these results suggest a role for using some immune traits, particularly CD11R1+ cells or AGP concentrations, as predictors of pig performance under the lower health status conditions associated with commercial farms.
需要有遗传标记或生物标志物来预测对广泛的传染病的抵抗力,特别是在商业农场典型的健康环境中。这些标记还需要在这些条件下具有遗传性,并且理想情况下与商业性能特征相关。在这项研究中,我们估计了广泛的免疫特征的遗传力,作为潜在的生物标志物,并测量了它们与特定病原体自由(SPF)和非 SPF 环境中的性能之间的关系。免疫特征在 674 头 SPF 猪和 606 头非 SPF 猪中进行了测量,这些猪是我们具有性能测量(平均日增重)的种群的子集,即 1549 头 SPF 猪和 1093 头非 SPF 猪。测量的免疫特征包括总白细胞计数和白细胞分类计数、外周血单核细胞(PBML)亚群(CD4+细胞、总 CD8alpha+细胞、经典 CD8alphabeta+细胞、CD11R1+细胞(CD8alpha+和 CD8alpha-)、B 细胞、单核细胞和 CD16+细胞)和急性期蛋白(α-1 酸性糖蛋白(AGP)、触珠蛋白、C 反应蛋白(CRP)和转甲状腺素蛋白)。几乎所有测试的特征都具有遗传性,无论健康状况如何,尽管非 SPF 条件下的平均日增重遗传力较低。性能与以下免疫特征之间也存在负遗传相关性:CD11R1+细胞、单核细胞和急性期蛋白 AGP。性能与 AGP 之间的关联强度不受健康状况的影响。然而,只有在 SPF 条件下性能与单核细胞之间以及在非 SPF 条件下性能与 CD11R1+细胞之间才存在负遗传相关性。尽管我们不能在这些关系中推断因果关系,但这些结果表明,在与商业农场相关的较低健康状况下,使用某些免疫特征,特别是 CD11R1+细胞或 AGP 浓度,作为预测猪性能的指标具有一定作用。