Genetic Variation of Mycobacterium avium ssp. paratuberculosis Infection in US Holsteins
- 1 May 2006
- journal article
- Published by American Dairy Science Association in Journal of Dairy Science
- Vol. 89 (5), 1804-1812
- https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.s0022-0302(06)72249-4
Abstract
The objective of this study was to estimate genetic variability of Mycobacterium avium ssp. paratuberculo- sis infection in US Holsteins. Blood and fecal samples were collected primarily from daughters of 12 bulls in their second or third lactation. Routine disease testing of the sires documented that they were not infected. Herds without a "suspect" or positive ELISA (sample/ positive ratio ≥ 0.10) or positive fecal culture test were deleted from the data set. The remaining 4,603 cows from 238 herds and 46 sires were used to estimate heritability of M. paratuberculosis infection. Heritabil- ity was estimated with 3 Johne's disease diagnostic tests: 1) fecal culture alone, 2) serum antibody ELISA alone, and 3) both tests (combined) with a positive ani- mal defined as all animals with either a positive fecal culture or ELISA test. Four statistical models were used to estimate heritability: 1) linear (ELISA), 2) threshold (fecal culture and combined), 3) ordered threshold (ELISA), and 4) bivariate linear-threshold (ELISA-fecal culture). A sire model and Bayesian approach using Markov chain Monte Carlo methods were used in each case. Heritability of infection based on the fecal culture test was 0.153 (posterior standard deviation (PSD) = 0.115). Heritability with the ELISA was 0.159 (PSD = 0.090) with a linear model and 0.091 (PSD = 0.053) with an ordered threshold model. Heritability of the combined tests was 0.102 (PSD = 0.066). Heritability estimates of fecal culture and ELISA with the bivariate model varied slightly from estimates obtained with the univariate models (0.125 and 0.183, respectively), with a corresponding increase in precision (PSD = 0.096 and 0.082, respectively). This study demonstrates that ex- ploitable genetic variation exists in dairy cattle for M. paratuberculosis infection susceptibility.Keywords
Funding Information
- Initiative for Future Agricultural and Food Systems (00-52100-9621)
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