U Müller, E M Strucken, J Gao, S Rahmatalla, P Korkuć, M Reissmann, G A Brockmann
{"title":"与体细胞得分相关的 SNPs 是否是荷斯坦奶牛对特定乳腺炎病原体易感性的合适标记?","authors":"U Müller, E M Strucken, J Gao, S Rahmatalla, P Korkuć, M Reissmann, G A Brockmann","doi":"10.1111/jbg.12904","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Mastitis in cattle is often caused by microorganism infections in the udder. The three most common pathogens are esculin-positive streptococci (SC+), coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS), and Escherichia coli (E. coli). In a previous study, 10 SNPs were associated with somatic cell score and mastitis in diverse Holstein populations. We tested these SNPs for their effects on individual pathogen presence. Milk and pathogen samples of 3076 Holstein cows were collected from four farms. Samples were excluded if multiple pathogens were present at the same time. Records of the same pathogen within 14 days of each other were counted as one infection. This resulted in 1129 pathogen-positive samples. Cases and controls were in ratios of 20:80 for SC+, 8:92 for CNS, and 11:89 for E. coli. The lasso, backward, and forward methods were used to narrow down SNPs associated with pathogen presence. The suitability of the SNPs to separate the samples into cases or controls for each pathogen was indicated using ROC curves. The Cochran-Armitage (CAT) and the Jonckheere-Terpstra (JTT) tests evaluated the influence of the SNPs on pathogen presence. Finally, a generalised linear mixed model (GLMM) including fixed environmental effects and a random sire effect was fitted to the binary trait of pathogen presence to test for association. In total, six out of the 10 investigated SNPs showed associations with pathogen presence based on the forward method: Two SNPs each for SC+ (rs41588957, rs41257403) and CNS (rs109934030, rs109441194), and three for E. coli (rs109934030, rs41634110, rs41636878). The CAT and GTT tests linked four SNPs (rs41588957, rs41634110, rs109441194, rs41636878) to pathogen presence, two of which were confirmed with the GLMM (rs41634110, rs109441194), with effects on CNS and E. coli. The SNPs linked to CNS and those linked to E. coli explained 13.2% and 13.8% of the variance, compared to 19% and 18.4%, respectively, of the full model with all 10 SNPs. Half of the SNP genotypes previously linked to lower SCS also decreased the probability for pathogen presence and might therefore be targets not just for lower SCS but for a better pathogen resistance. Trial Registration: Not applicable, no new data were collected for this study.</p>","PeriodicalId":54885,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Animal Breeding and Genetics","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.9000,"publicationDate":"2024-11-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Are SNPs Linked to Somatic Cell Score Suitable Markers for the Susceptibility to Specific Mastitis Pathogens in Holstein Cows?\",\"authors\":\"U Müller, E M Strucken, J Gao, S Rahmatalla, P Korkuć, M Reissmann, G A Brockmann\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/jbg.12904\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Mastitis in cattle is often caused by microorganism infections in the udder. The three most common pathogens are esculin-positive streptococci (SC+), coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS), and Escherichia coli (E. coli). In a previous study, 10 SNPs were associated with somatic cell score and mastitis in diverse Holstein populations. We tested these SNPs for their effects on individual pathogen presence. Milk and pathogen samples of 3076 Holstein cows were collected from four farms. Samples were excluded if multiple pathogens were present at the same time. Records of the same pathogen within 14 days of each other were counted as one infection. This resulted in 1129 pathogen-positive samples. Cases and controls were in ratios of 20:80 for SC+, 8:92 for CNS, and 11:89 for E. coli. The lasso, backward, and forward methods were used to narrow down SNPs associated with pathogen presence. The suitability of the SNPs to separate the samples into cases or controls for each pathogen was indicated using ROC curves. The Cochran-Armitage (CAT) and the Jonckheere-Terpstra (JTT) tests evaluated the influence of the SNPs on pathogen presence. Finally, a generalised linear mixed model (GLMM) including fixed environmental effects and a random sire effect was fitted to the binary trait of pathogen presence to test for association. In total, six out of the 10 investigated SNPs showed associations with pathogen presence based on the forward method: Two SNPs each for SC+ (rs41588957, rs41257403) and CNS (rs109934030, rs109441194), and three for E. coli (rs109934030, rs41634110, rs41636878). The CAT and GTT tests linked four SNPs (rs41588957, rs41634110, rs109441194, rs41636878) to pathogen presence, two of which were confirmed with the GLMM (rs41634110, rs109441194), with effects on CNS and E. coli. The SNPs linked to CNS and those linked to E. coli explained 13.2% and 13.8% of the variance, compared to 19% and 18.4%, respectively, of the full model with all 10 SNPs. Half of the SNP genotypes previously linked to lower SCS also decreased the probability for pathogen presence and might therefore be targets not just for lower SCS but for a better pathogen resistance. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
牛乳腺炎通常是由乳房内的微生物感染引起的。最常见的三种病原体是埃希菌阳性链球菌(SC+)、凝固酶阴性葡萄球菌(CNS)和大肠杆菌(E. coli)。在之前的一项研究中,10 个 SNP 与不同荷斯坦群体中的体细胞得分和乳腺炎有关。我们测试了这些 SNP 对个体病原体存在的影响。我们从四个牧场收集了 3076 头荷斯坦奶牛的牛奶和病原体样本。如果同时存在多种病原体,则排除样本。14 天内出现相同病原体的记录算作一次感染。因此,共有 1129 个病原体阳性样本。病例与对照的比例为:SC+ 20:80,CNS 8:92,大肠杆菌 11:89。利用套索法、后向法和前向法缩小了与病原体存在相关的 SNPs 的范围。利用 ROC 曲线显示 SNPs 是否适合将样本分为每种病原体的病例或对照。Cochran-Armitage(CAT)和Jonckheere-Terpstra(JTT)检验评估了SNPs对病原体存在的影响。最后,对病原体存在的二元性状拟合了一个广义线性混合模型(GLMM),其中包括固定的环境效应和随机的母系效应,以检验其关联性。根据正向方法,在 10 个调查的 SNPs 中,共有 6 个与病原体的存在有关联:SC+(rs41588957、rs41257403)和 CNS(rs109934030、rs109441194)各两个 SNP,大肠杆菌(rs109934030、rs41634110、rs41636878)三个。CAT 和 GTT 检验将四个 SNPs(rs41588957、rs41634110、rs109441194、rs41636878)与病原体的存在联系起来,其中两个 SNPs(rs41634110、rs109441194)通过 GLMM 得到证实,对中枢神经系统和大肠杆菌有影响。与中枢神经系统相关的 SNP 和与大肠杆菌相关的 SNP 分别解释了 13.2% 和 13.8% 的变异,而在包含所有 10 个 SNP 的完整模型中,解释变异的 SNP 分别为 19% 和 18.4%。之前与较低SCS相关的SNP基因型中,有一半也降低了病原体存在的概率,因此可能不仅是降低SCS的目标,也是提高病原体抵抗力的目标。试验注册:不适用,本研究未收集到新数据。
Are SNPs Linked to Somatic Cell Score Suitable Markers for the Susceptibility to Specific Mastitis Pathogens in Holstein Cows?
Mastitis in cattle is often caused by microorganism infections in the udder. The three most common pathogens are esculin-positive streptococci (SC+), coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS), and Escherichia coli (E. coli). In a previous study, 10 SNPs were associated with somatic cell score and mastitis in diverse Holstein populations. We tested these SNPs for their effects on individual pathogen presence. Milk and pathogen samples of 3076 Holstein cows were collected from four farms. Samples were excluded if multiple pathogens were present at the same time. Records of the same pathogen within 14 days of each other were counted as one infection. This resulted in 1129 pathogen-positive samples. Cases and controls were in ratios of 20:80 for SC+, 8:92 for CNS, and 11:89 for E. coli. The lasso, backward, and forward methods were used to narrow down SNPs associated with pathogen presence. The suitability of the SNPs to separate the samples into cases or controls for each pathogen was indicated using ROC curves. The Cochran-Armitage (CAT) and the Jonckheere-Terpstra (JTT) tests evaluated the influence of the SNPs on pathogen presence. Finally, a generalised linear mixed model (GLMM) including fixed environmental effects and a random sire effect was fitted to the binary trait of pathogen presence to test for association. In total, six out of the 10 investigated SNPs showed associations with pathogen presence based on the forward method: Two SNPs each for SC+ (rs41588957, rs41257403) and CNS (rs109934030, rs109441194), and three for E. coli (rs109934030, rs41634110, rs41636878). The CAT and GTT tests linked four SNPs (rs41588957, rs41634110, rs109441194, rs41636878) to pathogen presence, two of which were confirmed with the GLMM (rs41634110, rs109441194), with effects on CNS and E. coli. The SNPs linked to CNS and those linked to E. coli explained 13.2% and 13.8% of the variance, compared to 19% and 18.4%, respectively, of the full model with all 10 SNPs. Half of the SNP genotypes previously linked to lower SCS also decreased the probability for pathogen presence and might therefore be targets not just for lower SCS but for a better pathogen resistance. Trial Registration: Not applicable, no new data were collected for this study.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Animal Breeding and Genetics publishes original articles by international scientists on genomic selection, and any other topic related to breeding programmes, selection, quantitative genetic, genomics, diversity and evolution of domestic animals. Researchers, teachers, and the animal breeding industry will find the reports of interest. Book reviews appear in many issues.