Abstract

In low income countries, chickens play a vital role in daily life. They provide a critical source of protein through egg production and meat. Newcastle disease, caused by avian paramyxovirus type 1, has been ranked as the most devastating disease for scavenging chickens in Africa and Asia. High mortality among flocks infected with velogenic strains leads to a devastating loss of dietary protein and buying power for rural households. Improving the genetic resistance of chickens to Newcastle Disease virus (NDV), in addition to vaccination, is a practical target for improvement of poultry production in low income countries. Because response to NDV has a component of genetic control, it can be influenced through selective breeding. Adding genomic information to a breeding program can increase the amount of genetic progress per generation. In this study, we challenged a commercial egg-laying line with a lentogenic strain of NDV, measured phenotypic responses, collected genotypes, and associated genotypes with phenotypes. Collected phenotypes included viral load at 2 and 6 days post-infection (dpi), antibody levels pre-challenge and 10 dpi, and growth rates pre- and post-challenge. Six suggestive QTL associated with response to NDV and/or growth were identified, including novel and known QTL confirming previously reported associations with related traits. Additionally, previous RNA-seq analysis provided support for several of the genes located in or near the identified QTL. Considering the trend of negative genetic correlation between antibody and Newcastle Disease tolerance (growth under disease) and estimates of moderate to high heritability, we provide evidence that these NDV response traits can be influenced through selective breeding. Producing chickens that perform favorably in challenging environments will ultimately increase the supply of quality protein for human consumption.

Highlights

  • In low income countries, chickens play a vital role in daily life

  • We identified genomic regions associated with response to Newcastle disease virus (NDV) and/or growth

  • Three suggestive quantitative trait loci (QTL) were found when excluding these 19 birds, while only two of the three were found when using the full dataset. These analyses provide evidence that passive antibody interference caused “noise” in the antibody response data; these 19 birds were excluded from the association analysis for antibody pre-challenge and at 10 dpi

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Summary

Introduction

Chickens play a vital role in daily life. They provide important sources of high quality protein and macro and micronutrients. They are important for livelihood and gender empowerment, as women are often the beneficiaries of poultry production, which is often not true with larger livestock (Guèye, 2000). High mortality among flocks lead to a devastating loss of dietary protein and buying power for rural households. Prevention of this disease through vaccination is challenging in rural, scavenging production systems. Improving the genetic resistance of chickens to NDV is a practical target for improvement of poultry production in low income countries

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