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- Title
A genome-wide association study explores the genetic determinism of host resistance to Salmonella pullorum infection in chickens.
- Authors
Li, Xinghua; Nie, Changsheng; Liu, Yuchen; Chen, Yu; Lv, Xueze; Wang, Liang; Zhang, Jianwei; Li, Kaiyang; Jia, Yaxiong; Ban, Liping; Ning, Zhonghua; Qu, Lujiang
- Abstract
Background: Salmonella infection is a serious concern in poultry farming because of its impact on both economic loss and human health. Chicks aged 20 days or less are extremely vulnerable to Salmonella pullorum (SP), which causes high mortality. Furthermore, an outbreak of SP infection can result in a considerable number of carriers that become potential transmitters, thus, threatening fellow chickens and offspring. In this study, we conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) to detect potential genomic loci and candidate genes associated with two disease-related traits: death and carrier state. Methods: In total, 818 birds were phenotyped for death and carrier state traits through a SP challenge experiment, and genotyped by using a 600 K high-density single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array. A GWAS using a single-marker linear mixed model was performed with the GEMMA software. RNA-sequencing on spleen samples was carried out for further identification of candidate genes. Results: We detected a region that was located between 33.48 and 34.03 Mb on chicken chromosome 4 and was significantly associated with death, with the most significant SNP (rs314483802) accounting for 11.73% of the phenotypic variation. Two candidate genes, FBXW7 and LRBA, were identified as the most promising genes involved in resistance to SP. The expression levels of FBXW7 and LRBA were significantly downregulated after SP infection, which suggests that they may have a role in controlling SP infections. Two other significant loci and related genes (TRAF3 and gga-mir-489) were associated with carrier state, which indicates a different polygenic determinism compared with that of death. In addition, genomic inbreeding coefficients showed no correlation with resistance to SP within each breed in our study. Conclusions: The results of this GWAS with a carefully organized Salmonella challenge experiment represent an important milestone in understanding the genetics of infectious disease resistance, offer a theoretical basis for breeding SP-resistant chicken lines using marker-assisted selection, and provide new information for salmonellosis research in humans and other animals.
- Subjects
SALMONELLA diseases; GENETIC determinism; NATURAL immunity; SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms; CHICKENS; CHICKEN diseases; POULTRY farming
- Publication
Genetics Selection Evolution, 2019, Vol 51, Issue 1, pN.PAG
- ISSN
0999-193X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1186/s12711-019-0492-4