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New loci and neuronal pathways for resilience to heat stress in cattle

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-12, 02:02 authored by Evans Kiptoo CheruiyotEvans Kiptoo Cheruiyot, Mekonnen Haile-MariamMekonnen Haile-Mariam, Benjamin CocksBenjamin Cocks, Iona MacLeodIona MacLeod, Ruidong XiangRuidong Xiang, Jennie PryceJennie Pryce
While understanding the genetic basis of heat tolerance is crucial in the context of global warming’s effect on humans, livestock, and wildlife, the specific genetic variants and biological features that confer thermotolerance in animals are still not well characterized. We used dairy cows as a model to study heat tolerance because they are lactating, and therefore often prone to thermal stress. The data comprised almost 0.5 million milk records (milk, fat, and proteins) of 29,107 Australian Holsteins, each having around 15 million imputed sequence variants. Dairy animals often reduce their milk production when temperature and humidity rise; thus, the phenotypes used to measure an individual’s heat tolerance were defined as the rate of milk production decline (slope traits) with a rising temperature–humidity index. With these slope traits, we performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) using different approaches, including conditional analyses, to correct for the relationship between heat tolerance and level of milk production. The results revealed multiple novel loci for heat tolerance, including 61 potential functional variants at sites highly conserved across 100 vertebrate species. Moreover, it was interesting that specific candidate variants and genes are related to the neuronal system (ITPR1, ITPR2, and GRIA4) and neuroactive ligand–receptor interaction functions for heat tolerance (NPFFR2, CALCR, and GHR), providing a novel insight that can help to develop genetic and management approaches to combat heat stress.

History

Publication Date

2021-08-17

Journal

Scientific Reports

Volume

11

Issue

1

Article Number

16619

Pagination

16p.

Publisher

Springer Nature

ISSN

2045-2322

Rights Statement

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