Abstract

Simple SummaryLocal breeds represent a precious reservoir of genetic diversity, crucial to adapting to environmental and climate changes and reacting to evolving diseases. In Sicily, four native dairy breeds, namely Valle del Belìce, Comisana, Barbaresca, and Pinzirita, have adapted to low-input farming systems and semiarid environments, having an essential role in producing high-quality milk and typical dairy products. Maedi-visna (MV) is one of the most important chronic diseases affecting the sheep sector worldwide, causing production losses. Different target genes play an important role in immunity and in genetic resilience to MV, such as TMEM154, TLR9, MYD88, and CCR5. A major host genetic component to sheep MV susceptibility was identified in the ovine TMEM154 gene. Animals with either of TMEM154 haplotypes that encode glutamate at position 35 (E35) of the protein are at higher risk of MV infection than those homozygous with lysine at position 35 (K35). In the tested Sicilian breeds, animals carrying the allele E35 showed a greater risk of being serologically positive. Comisana, Barbaresca, and Pinzirita breeds showed a good frequency of the protective allele K35, whilst a high frequency of risk allele was found in the Valle del Belìce breed, related to the selection strategies addressed to obtain a productive dairy sheep. Our results highlight the importance of the preservation of autochthonous breeds as a reservoir of natural resistance against infectious disease.Maedi-visna (MV) is a disease caused by small ruminant lentiviruses. It is included in the list of notifiable terrestrial animal diseases due to economic losses and animal welfare harm in the sheep sector. To date, control programs remain the onliest approach to avoiding infection. The allelic variant p.Glu35Lys (E35K) of the TMEM154 gene has been strongly associated with host vulnerability to MV illness. The present study aimed to investigate the association of TMEM154 E35K allele frequencies with MV susceptibility in native Sicilian sheep breeds. More than 400 animals from 14 local sheep were serologically tested and genotyped for the TMEM154 E35K polymorphism. The local breeds displayed different values of MV seroprevalence, with the lowest antibody prevalence in Barbaresca and Pinzirita breeds. TMEM154 protective allele (K35) was less frequent than the risk allele (E35) in Valle del Belìce breed, whereas the other three breeds showed a more balanced alleles distribution. A positive association between seroprevalence and genotype was found in the entire sample set. The risk of infection resulted in more than 3-fold times as high in sheep with EK and EE genotype compared to the KK genotype. Our data could be helpful in establishing selection breeding programs aimed at reducing MV infection in Sicilian sheep farming and encouraging the breeding of native breeds.

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