4.7 Article

Describing variability in pig genes involved in coronavirus infections for a One Health perspective in conservation of animal genetic resources

期刊

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-82956-0

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资金

  1. Europe-FAANG COST Action
  2. Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Italy
  3. University of Bologna RFO 2016-2019 programmes
  4. Italian MIUR 2017 PigPhenomics project
  5. European Union [634476]
  6. European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) Secretariat, project Application of animal genomics and data mining to predict and monitor novel coronavirus potential infections (VirAnimalOne)
  7. EGI call for COVID-19 research projects (AnGen1H project)
  8. Por Fesr Emilia-Romagna 2014-2020 (actions 1.1.4 and 1.2.2-Bando per sostenere progetti di ricerca ed innovazione per lo sviluppo di soluzioni finalizzate al contrasto dell'epidemia da COVID-19-Project LIVESTOCK-STOP-COVI)
  9. BBSRC [BBS/E/T/000PR9818] Funding Source: UKRI

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This study investigated the variability of four genes in European and Asian pig populations and identified numerous variants. The results support the importance of conservation programs for pig genetic resources and the potential use of host gene variability to design selection programs to increase resistance to coronaviruses.
Coronaviruses silently circulate in human and animal populations, causing mild to severe diseases. Therefore, livestock are important components of a One Health perspective aimed to control these viral infections. However, at present there is no example that considers pig genetic resources in this context. In this study, we investigated the variability of four genes (ACE2, ANPEP and DPP4 encoding for host receptors of the viral spike proteins and TMPRSS2 encoding for a host proteinase) in 23 European (19 autochthonous and three commercial breeds and one wild boar population) and two Asian Sus scrofa populations. A total of 2229 variants were identified in the four candidate genes: 26% of them were not previously described; 29 variants affected the protein sequence and might potentially interact with the infection mechanisms. The results coming from this work are a first step towards a One Health perspective that should consider conservation programs of pig genetic resources with twofold objectives: (i) genetic resources could be reservoirs of host gene variability useful to design selection programs to increase resistance to coronaviruses; (ii) the described variability in genes involved in coronavirus infections across many different pig populations might be part of a risk assessment including pig genetic resources.

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