| Literature DB >> 27905875 |
Hubert Pausch1,2, Simon Ammermüller3, Christine Wurmser3, Henning Hamann4, Jens Tetens5, Cord Drögemüller6, Ruedi Fries3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The widespread use of individual sires for artificial insemination promotes the propagation of recessive conditions. Inadvertent matings between unnoticed carriers of deleterious alleles may result in the manifestation of fatal phenotypes in their progeny. Breeding consultants and farmers reported on Vorderwald calves with a congenital skin disease. The clinical findings in affected calves were compatible with epidermolysis bullosa.Entities:
Keywords: Autosomal recessive; COL7A1; Epidermolysis bullosa; Nonsense mutation; Skin disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27905875 PMCID: PMC5131490 DOI: 10.1186/s12863-016-0458-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genet ISSN: 1471-2156 Impact factor: 2.797
Fig. 1A Vorderwald calf with a painful skin disease. A few days old calf with reddened and bloody sites at its fetlocks and ear cartilage aberrations (a-c). The relationship between the Vorderwald x Montbéliarde crossbred bull Piras and 25 calves with epidermolysis bullosa (d). Circles, rectangles and diamonds represent females, males and animals of unknown sex, respectively. Filled symbols denote diseased animals. Orange and green colours denote animals that were available for genotyping and sequencing
Fig. 2Haplotype-based association mapping of epidermolysis bullosa. Association of 57,837 haplotypes with epidermolysis bullosa (a). Red colour represents significantly associated haplotypes (P < 8.64 × 10−7). Quantile-quantile plot (b). The grey shaded area represents the 95%-concentration band under the null hypothesis of no association. Homozygosity mapping in two affected Vorderwald (VWD) calves using SNPs located on bovine chromosome 22 (c). The green colour indicates segments of extended homozygosity in two calves with EB
Genotypes of 88 Vorderwald cattle at the rs876174537 polymorphism in COL7A1
| Animal group |
| Genotypes at the | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CC | CT | TT | ||
| Calves with epidermolysis bullosa | 2 | - | - | 2 |
| Obligate carriers | ||||
| Dams of calves with EB | 7 | - | 7 | - |
| Sires of calves with EB | 7 | - | 7 | - |
| Healthy bulls used in artificial insemination | ||||
| Carriers of the EB-associated haplotype | 0 | - | - | - |
| Non-carriers | 21 | 21 | - | - |
| Haplotype state unknown | 51 | 50 | 1 | - |
Genotypes for the nonsense mutation (rs876174537) in COL7A1 were obtained in 88 animals of the Vorderwald cattle breed using Sanger sequencing including 14 parents of affected calves (obligate carriers). The seven sires of affected calves were also used in artificial insemination
Fig. 3Homozygosity mapping on bovine chromosome 22 in five calves with epidermolysis bullosa. Light blue, grey and dark blue, respectively, represent homozygous, heterozygous and alternate homozygous genotypes in five calves with epidermolysis bullosa from Vorderwald (VWD) and Rotes Höhenvieh (RHV) cattle. The orange frames indicate common segments of extended homozygosity within breeds. The green bar represents a 8.72 Mb segment of extended homozygosity that was shared among the diseased calves from both breeds. The red triangle represents the position of the rs876174537 T-allele (red triangle) in the COL7A1 gene
Fig. 4Genetic clustering of 714 animals from seven cattle breeds. Plot of the top two principal components of the genomic relationship matrix (a). Symbols with red frames represent five calves with epidermolysis bullosa from the Vorderwald (VWD) and Rotes Höhenvieh (RHV) cattle breed. b Population structure of seven cattle populations obtained using the fastSTRUCTURE software tool. Different colours indicate ancestry proportions for 2, 3 and 4 predefined genetic clusters (b). FV: Fleckvieh, MON: Montbéliarde, VWD: Vorderwald, RHV: Rotes Höhenvieh, BSW: Brown Swiss, RDC: Red Dairy Cattle, HOL: Holstein Friesian