4.6 Article

Whole-Genome Resequencing to Study Brucellosis Susceptibility in Sheep

Journal

FRONTIERS IN GENETICS
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2021.653927

Keywords

brucellosis; whole-genome resequencing; F-ST; Fisher's exact test; chi-square test; sheep

Funding

  1. Earmarked Found for China Agriculture Research System [CARS-38]
  2. West Light Foundation of the Chinese Academy of Sciences

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This study identified candidate genes associated with brucellosis resistance in sheep through whole-genome sequencing, revealing enrichment of these genes in specific pathways. This provides valuable molecular markers for breeding brucellosis-resistant sheep and enhances our understanding of the genetic mechanism of brucellosis resistance.
Brucellosis is a zoonotic disease and a major public health problem. However, the genetic mechanism of brucellosis in sheep remains unclear. In this study, serum samples were collected from 6,358 sheep from the F2 population (Dorper sheep male x Hu sheep female), and antibody levels were continuously measured at 14 days and 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10 months after administration of brucellosis vaccine. Finally, 19 brucellosis-resistant group (BRG) sheep and 22 brucellosis-susceptible group sheep (BSG) were screened for whole-genome sequencing. Using the fixation index, Fisher's exact test, and chi-square test, a total of 205 candidate SNP sites were identified. Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes pathway enrichment analysis suggested that 138 candidate genes were significantly enriched in adherens junction (CTNNA3, PARD3, and PTPRM), cell adhesion molecules (NLGN1, CNTNAP2, NCAM1, and PTPRM), salivary secretion (LOC101102109, PRKG1, and ADCY2), and hippo signaling pathway (CTNNA3, YAP1, and PARD3). These findings provide valuable molecular markers for brucellosis resistance breeding in sheep and novel insights into the genetic mechanism of brucellosis resistance.

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