AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates how immune pathways in dairy cows change with age, focusing on Holstein cows in early lactation, to identify factors that influence longevity and health as they age.
  • Three groups of cows based on lactation number (primiparous, multiparous 2-3, and multiparous 4-7) were analyzed to compare gene expression in leukocytes, revealing seven modules linked to lactation number and distinct expression patterns for various gene clusters.
  • Key findings show that genes more active in primiparous cows are linked to gene transcription regulation and mitochondrial functions, while multiparous cows exhibit higher expression of genes related to glycolysis, immunity, and immune defense, highlighting age

Article Abstract

Background: Previous studies have identified many immune pathways which are consistently altered in humans and model organisms as they age. Dairy cows are often culled at quite young ages due to an inability to cope adequately with metabolic and infectious diseases, resulting in reduced milk production and infertility. Improved longevity is therefore a desirable trait which would benefit both farmers and their cows. This study analysed the transcriptome derived from RNA-seq data of leukocytes obtained from Holstein cows in early lactation with respect to lactation number.

Results: Samples were divided into three lactation groups for analysis: i) primiparous (PP, n = 53), ii) multiparous in lactations 2-3 (MP 2-3, n = 121), and iii) MP in lactations 4-7 (MP > 3, n = 55). Leukocyte expression was compared between PP vs MP > 3 cows with MP 2-3 as background using DESeq2 followed by weighted gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA). Seven modules were significantly correlated (r ≥ 0.25) to the trait lactation number. Genes from the modules which were more highly expressed in either the PP or MP > 3 cows were pooled, and the gene lists subjected to David functional annotation cluster analysis. The top three clusters from modules more highly expressed in the PP cows all involved regulation of gene transcription, particularly zinc fingers. Another cluster included genes encoding enzymes in the mitochondrial beta-oxidation pathway. Top clusters up-regulated in MP > 3 cows included the terms Glycolysis/Gluconeogenesis, C-type lectin, and Immunity. Differentially expressed candidate genes for ageing previously identified in the human blood transcriptome up-regulated in PP cows were mainly associated with T-cell function (CCR7, CD27, IL7R, CAMK4, CD28), mitochondrial ribosomal proteins (MRPS27, MRPS9, MRPS31), and DNA replication and repair (WRN). Those up-regulated in MP > 3 cows encoded immune defence proteins (LYZ, CTSZ, SREBF1, GRN, ANXA5, ADARB1).

Conclusions: Genes and pathways associated with lactation number in cows were identified for the first time to date, and we found that many were comparable to those known to be associated with ageing in humans and model organisms. We also detected changes in energy utilization and immune responses in leukocytes from older cows.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8466696PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-021-07977-5DOI Listing

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