Accurate Genomic Predictions for Chronic Wasting Disease in U.S. White-Tailed Deer

Author:

Seabury Christopher M1,Oldeschulte David L1,Bhattarai Eric K1,Legare Dhruti2,Ferro Pamela J2,Metz Richard P3,Johnson Charles D3,Lockwood Mitchell A4,Nichols Tracy A5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas

2. Texas A&M Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory, College Station, Texas

3. Genomics Core, Texas A&M AgriLife Research, College Station, Texas

4. Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Austin, Texas, and

5. USDA-APHIS-VS-Cervid Health Program, Fort Collins, CO

Abstract

Abstract The geographic expansion of chronic wasting disease (CWD) in U.S. white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) has been largely unabated by best management practices, diagnostic surveillance, and depopulation of positive herds. Using a custom Affymetrix Axiom single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array, we demonstrate that both differential susceptibility to CWD, and natural variation in disease progression, are moderately to highly heritable (h2=0.337±0.079─0.637±0.070) among farmed U.S. white-tailed deer, and that loci other than PRNP are involved. Genome-wide association analyses using 123,987 quality filtered SNPs for a geographically diverse cohort of 807 farmed U.S. white-tailed deer (n = 284 CWD positive; n = 523 CWD non-detect) confirmed the prion gene (PRNP; G96S) as a large-effect risk locus (P-value < 6.3E-11), as evidenced by the estimated proportion of phenotypic variance explained (PVE ≥ 0.05), but also demonstrated that more phenotypic variance was collectively explained by loci other than PRNP. Genomic best linear unbiased prediction (GBLUP; n = 123,987 SNPs) with k-fold cross validation (k = 3; k = 5) and random sampling (n = 50 iterations) for the same cohort of 807 farmed U.S. white-tailed deer produced mean genomic prediction accuracies ≥ 0.81; thereby providing the necessary foundation for exploring a genomically-estimated CWD eradication program.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology

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