AI Article Synopsis

  • Trypanosomosis significantly decreases cattle productivity in areas affected by tsetse flies, with Baoule cattle being trypanotolerant while Zebu cattle, though larger, are more susceptible.
  • Farmers have been interbreeding Baoule and Zebu to enhance disease tolerance and productivity.
  • The study analyzed genetic differences in 214 cattle to identify regions associated with trypanotolerance, revealing significant differences in ancestry and suggesting that optimizing breed composition could lead to more productive and disease-resistant animals.

Article Abstract

Trypanosomosis is a serious cause of reduction in productivity of cattle in tsetse-fly infested areas. Baoule and other local Taurine cattle breeds in Burkina Faso are trypanotolerant. Zebuine cattle, which are also kept there are susceptible to trypanosomosis but bigger in body size. Farmers have continuously been intercrossing Baoule and Zebu animals to increase production and disease tolerance. The aim of this study was to compare levels of zebuine and taurine admixture in genomic regions potentially involved in trypanotolerance with background admixture of composites to identify differences in allelic frequencies of tolerant and non-tolerant animals. The study was conducted on 214 animals (90 Baoule, 90 Zebu, and 34 composites), genotyped with 25 microsatellites across the genome and with 155 SNPs in 23 candidate regions. Degrees of admixture of composites were analyzed for microsatellite and SNP data separately. Average Baoule admixture based on microsatellites across the genomes of the Baoule- Zebu composites was 0.31, which was smaller than the average Baoule admixture in the trypanosomosis candidate regions of 0.37 (P = 0.15). Fixation index F ST measured in the overall genome based on microsatellites or with SNPs from candidate regions indicates strong differentiation between breeds. Nine out of 23 regions had F ST ≥ 0.20 calculated from haplotypes or individual SNPs. The levels of admixture were significantly different from background admixture, as revealed by microsatellite data, for six out of the nine regions. Five out of the six regions showed an excess of Baoule ancestry. Information about best levels of breed composition would be useful for future breeding ctivities, aiming at trypanotolerant animals with higher productive capacity.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4404968PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2015.00137DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

candidate regions
12
baoule zebu
8
background admixture
8
admixture composites
8
zebu composites
8
snps candidate
8
average baoule
8
baoule admixture
8
based microsatellites
8
admixture
7

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!