Riggio Valentina, Madder Maxime, Labuschagne Michel, Callaby Rebecca, Zhao Rongrong, Djikeng Appolinaire, Fourie Josephus, Prendergast James G D, Morrison Liam J
The Roslin Institute and Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Clinglobal, Tamarin, Mauritius.
Front Genet. 2023 Jul 28;14:1197160. doi: 10.3389/fgene.2023.1197160. eCollection 2023.
The control of tick-borne haemoparasites in cattle largely relies on the use of acaricide drugs against the tick vectors, with some vaccination also being used against selected pathogens. These interventions can be difficult in Africa, where accessibility and cost of vaccines can be issues, and the increasing resistance of tick vectors to the widely used acaricides is a complication to disease control. A potential complementary control strategy could be the exploitation of any natural host genetic resistance to the pathogens. However, there are currently very few estimates of the extent of host resistance to tick-borne haemoparasites, and a significant contributing factor to this knowledge gap is likely to be the difficulty of collecting appropriate samples and data in the smallholder systems that predominate livestock production in low- and middle-income countries, particularly at scale. In this study, we have estimated the heritability for the presence/absence of several important haemoparasite species (including , , , and ), as well as for relevant traits such as body weight and body condition score (BCS), in 1,694 cattle from four African countries (Burkina Faso, Ghana, Nigeria, and Tanzania). Heritability estimates within countries were mostly not significant, ranging from 0.05 to 0.84 across traits and countries, with standard errors between 0.07 and 0.91. However, the weighted mean of heritability estimates was moderate and significant for body weight and BCS (0.40 and 0.49, respectively), with significant heritabilities also observed for the presence of (0.16) and (0.19) In a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for these traits, two peaks were identified as reaching the suggestive significance threshold ( < 1.91 × 10 and < 1.89 × 10, respectively): one on chromosome 24 for BCS and one on chromosome 8 for the infection status These findings indicate that there is likely to be a genetic basis that contributes to pathogen presence/absence for tick-borne haemoparasite species, which could potentially be exploited to improve cattle resistance in Africa to the economically important diseases caused by these pathogens.
牛蜱传血液寄生虫的控制在很大程度上依赖于使用杀螨剂药物来对付蜱虫媒介,同时也有一些疫苗用于针对特定病原体。在非洲,这些干预措施可能会面临困难,因为疫苗的可及性和成本可能是问题,而且蜱虫媒介对广泛使用的杀螨剂的耐药性不断增加,这给疾病控制带来了复杂情况。一种潜在的补充控制策略可能是利用宿主对病原体的任何天然遗传抗性。然而,目前对宿主对蜱传血液寄生虫抗性程度的估计非常少,造成这一知识差距的一个重要因素可能是在低收入和中等收入国家占主导地位的小农户养殖系统中收集适当样本和数据存在困难,尤其是大规模收集时。在本研究中,我们估计了来自四个非洲国家(布基纳法索、加纳、尼日利亚和坦桑尼亚)的1694头牛中几种重要血液寄生虫物种(包括 、 、 和 )的存在与否的遗传力,以及体重和体况评分(BCS)等相关性状的遗传力。各国的遗传力估计大多不显著,各性状和国家的范围从0.05到0.84,标准误差在0.07到0.91之间。然而,体重和BCS的遗传力估计加权平均值适中且显著(分别为0.40和0.49), 的存在(0.16)和 的存在(0.19)也观察到显著的遗传力。在对这些性状的全基因组关联研究(GWAS)的荟萃分析中,确定了两个达到提示性显著阈值(分别为 < 1.91×10 和 < 1.89×10)的峰值:一个在24号染色体上与BCS相关,一个在8号染色体上与 感染状态相关。这些发现表明,蜱传血液寄生虫物种的病原体存在与否可能存在遗传基础,这有可能被利用来提高非洲牛对这些病原体引起的经济上重要疾病的抗性。