Abstract
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) determines the immune response, and the MHC genes are promising candidate genes for identifying associations with diseases. The decisive role in the resistance of cattle to diseases belongs to the major histocompatibility complex of (BoLA). The BoLA system consists of several jointly operating genes that provide antigen presentation by MHC system molecules followed by an immune response to pathogenic microorganisms. The most functional is the BoLA-DRB3 gene. Its exon 2 is highly polymorphic and encodes the peptide antigen-binding cleft. Alleles, for which a close connection with disease susceptibility or disease resistance has been detected, are considered as DNA markers. These play a decisive role in the breeding of cattle to create herds resistant to diseases, including mastitis. This paper presents the results of a study of BoLA-DRB3 gene polymorphism in two commercial cattle breeds: the Ukrainian black-pied dairy (UBPD) and the Ukrainian red-pied dairy (URPD) and its association with mastitis. The UBPD and the URPD cows were genotyped at the bovine lymphocyte antigen DRB3.2 locus by a genotyping system that used polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment length polymorphisms (PCR-RLFP). In 276 UBPD cows, 32 BoLA-DRB alleles have been found. Six alleles (*03, *08, *10, *22, *24 and *28) were identified with a frequency of more than 5% (total amount of 50.4%). The allele BoLA-DRB3.2*24 was the most frequent (19.2%). In the UBPD population (n = 162), four BoLA-DRB3.2 alleles are truly associated with mastitis: *24 and *26 with susceptibility and *13 and *22 with resistance. In 117 URPD cows, 22 alleles were identified, of which the most frequent were *07, *22, *11, *24, *01, *03 and *16 (total frequency 64.5%). Allele BoLA-DRB3.2*07 (present in 25.6% of cows) was the most commonly found. In the URPD population studied, four alleles truly associated with mastitis were identified. Animals susceptible to the disease had alleles *07 and *08, and resistant animals had alleles *22 and *24. Breeding activities for the creation of cattle resistant to mastitis using alleles of the BoLA-DRB3 gene are much more effective than treatment and special care for animals. Similar research should be carried out for other Ukrainian breeds in relation to various diseases (leukemia, necrobacteriosis, etc.).
Highlights
Udder diseases of cows lead to significant economic loss for the dairy business
Our study has identified alleles associated with mastitis which are different from alleles identified by other researchers in similar studies
The results obtained in this study confirmed the hypothesis of DRB3 being a marker for susceptibility to mastitis in dairy cows
Summary
Udder diseases of cows lead to significant economic loss for the dairy business. That loss is greater than any damage from all non-contagious diseases in cattle farming. Mastitis in cattle imposes a significant financial burden on milk producers (the dairy industry worldwide loses $16–26 billion annually) (Abdel Hameed et al, 2006). Dairy production in Ukraine is the main branch of cattle farming. In 2016, 10,329 thousand tons of milk were received from 2,100 thousand cows (Chajkova & Foshhij, 2016). Mastitis of cows represents the biggest challenge for milk producers. The analysis of data from different publications shows that cases of mastitis amount to 18.8–34.7% of livestock, including 3.62– 12.6% of clinically manifested cases. The loss due to the disease is about $75 per animal (Hanjejev & Janchuk, 2011)
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