Abstract

Water buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) are an important animal resource that contributes milk, meat, leather, dairy products, and power for plowing and transport. However, mastitis, a bacterial disease affecting milk production and reproduction efficiency, is most prevalent in populations having intensive selection for higher milk yield, especially where the inbreeding level is also high. Climate change and poor hygiene management practices further complicate the issue. The management of this disease faces major challenges, like antibiotic resistance, maximum residue level, horizontal gene transfer, and limited success in resistance breeding. Bovine mastitis genome wide association studies have had limited success due to breed differences, sample sizes, and minor allele frequency, lowering the power to detect the diseases associated with SNPs. In this work, we focused on the application of targeted gene panels (TGPs) in screening for candidate gene association analysis, and how this approach overcomes the limitation of genome wide association studies. This work will facilitate the targeted sequencing of buffalo genomic regions with high depth coverage required to mine the extremely rare variants potentially associated with buffalo mastitis. Although the whole genome assembly of water buffalo is available, neither mastitis genes are predicted nor TGP in the form of web-genomic resources are available for future variant mining and association studies. Out of the 129 mastitis associated genes of cattle, 101 were completely mapped on the buffalo genome to make TGP. This further helped in identifying rare variants in water buffalo. Eighty-five genes were validated in the buffalo gene expression atlas, with the RNA-Seq data of 50 tissues. The functions of 97 genes were predicted, revealing 225 pathways. The mastitis proteins were used for protein-protein interaction network analysis to obtain additional cross-talking proteins. A total of 1,306 SNPs and 152 indels were identified from 101 genes. Water Buffalo-MSTdb was developed with 3-tier architecture to retrieve mastitis associated genes having genomic coordinates with chromosomal details for TGP sequencing for mining of minor alleles for further association studies. Lastly, a web-genomic resource was made available to mine variants of targeted gene panels in buffalo for mastitis resistance breeding in an endeavor to ensure improved productivity and the reproductive efficiency of water buffalo.

Highlights

  • Water buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) have been domesticated for more than 5,000 years, are known as “Black Gold” due to their economic value

  • We present a web-genomic resource that is required for variant mining for future association studies of mastitis disease

  • Many mastitis associated genes like complement C5 (C5) and chemokine (C-X-C motif) receptor 1 (CXCR1), are reported to be conserved as high as up to 99% sequence similarity [63, 64]. This extensive conservation of cattle genes in water buffalo is due to their common ancestor, homologous proteins, common gene family, common CNV, common gene statistics, across species selection signature of milk pathways are revealed in buffalo genome Benchmarking Universal Single-Copy Orthologs (BUSCO) mapping studies [62]

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Summary

Introduction

Water buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) have been domesticated for more than 5,000 years, are known as “Black Gold” due to their economic value. Its contribution to the Indian GDP in terms of milk, meat, horns, hides, leather, dairy products like cream, butter, yogurt, and cheese, power, plowing, and transporting people and crops have made buffalo an important animal resource in rural areas. The estimated world population of water buffalo is 208 million which is spread across over 77 countries in five continents with a major population (96%) in Asia [1]. Water buffalo is an efficient converter of poor-quality forages into high quality milk and meat, making it a very valuable genetic resource for countries having “Low External-Input System” [2]. Climate change with a rising temperature humidity index (THI) has induced mastitis and many other diseases in major dairy animals including buffalo like retained placenta, metritis, ovarian cysts, claw diseases, milk fever, ketosis, and displaced abomasum [5,6,7]

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