Literature DB >> 16262866

Resistance to abomasal nematodes and individual genetic variability in reindeer.

Steeve D Côté1, Audun Stien, R Justin Irvine, John F Dallas, Freda Marshall, Odd Halvorsen, Rolf Langvatn, Steve D Albon.   

Abstract

Resistance to parasites is believed to have a widespread influence on demographic and adaptive processes. In systems where parasites impose a fitness cost on their host, heterozygotes may be selected because they are more resistant to parasites than homozygotes. Our objective was to assess the relationships between genomewide individual heterozygosity and abomasal nematode burdens in female Svalbard reindeer (Rangifer tarandus platyrhynchus) after the effects of host age, locality, season, and year had been accounted for. Samples were obtained from 306 female reindeer that were culled and genotyped at nine microsatellite loci. Reindeer in our study populations are mainly parasitized by the gastrointestinal nematodes Ostertagia gruehneri and Marshallagia marshalli. The infection intensity of each parasite differed between subpopulations, and among host age classes, seasons and years. We found no significant relationships between abomasal worm burdens, or lumen and mucosa larvae, of either O. gruehneri or M. marshalli and individual heterozygosity (or mean d(2)) alone or in interactions with host age, locality, and year. Although we analysed one of the largest data set available to date on gastrointestinal nematodes of a wild ruminant, we used a typical data set of nine genetic neutral markers that may have had low power to detect heterozygosity-fitness correlations. We conclude that the proportion of the variance in parasite resistance explained by individual heterozygosity for neutral genetic markers is low in Svalbard reindeer and in vertebrates in general, and we suggest that the candidate-gene approach might be more fruitful for further research on gene-fitness correlations.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16262866     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2005.02733.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Ecol        ISSN: 0962-1083            Impact factor:   6.185


  10 in total

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2.  Candidate gene microsatellite variation is associated with parasitism in wild bighorn sheep.

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3.  Disease-mediated inbreeding depression in a large, open population of cooperative crows.

Authors:  Andrea K Townsend; Anne B Clark; Kevin J McGowan; Elizabeth L Buckles; Andrew D Miller; Irby J Lovette
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4.  Adult survival in migratory caribou is negatively associated with MHC functional diversity.

Authors:  Marianne Gagnon; Glenn Yannic; Frédéric Boyer; Steeve D Côté
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5.  Genetic regulation of parasite infection: empirical evidence of the functional significance of an IL4 gene SNP on nematode infections in wild primates.

Authors:  Dagmar Clough; Peter M Kappeler; Lutz Walter
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6.  Inbreeding effects on immune response in free-living song sparrows (Melospiza melodia).

Authors:  Jane M Reid; Peter Arcese; Lukas F Keller; Kyle H Elliott; Laura Sampson; Dennis Hasselquist
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8.  Does genetic diversity predict health in humans?

Authors:  Hanne C Lie; Leigh W Simmons; Gillian Rhodes
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9.  The effect and relative importance of neutral genetic diversity for predicting parasitism varies across parasite taxa.

Authors:  María José Ruiz-López; Ryan J Monello; Matthew E Gompper; Lori S Eggert
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-09-26       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Both candidate gene and neutral genetic diversity correlate with parasite resistance in female Mediterranean mouflon.

Authors:  Elodie Portanier; Mathieu Garel; Sébastien Devillard; Daniel Maillard; Jocelyn Poissant; Maxime Galan; Slimania Benabed; Marie-Thérèse Poirel; Jeanne Duhayer; Christian Itty; Gilles Bourgoin
Journal:  BMC Ecol       Date:  2019-03-05       Impact factor: 2.964

  10 in total

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