Influence of the At-Arrival Host Transcriptome on Bovine Respiratory Disease Incidence during Backgrounding

Author:

Green Mollie M.1,Woolums Amelia R.2,Karisch Brandi B.3ORCID,Harvey Kelsey M.4,Capik Sarah F.5,Scott Matthew A.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Agricultural Sciences, West Texas A&M University, Canyon, TX 79016, USA

2. Department of Pathobiology and Population Medicine, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS 39762, USA

3. Department of Animal and Dairy Sciences, Mississippi State University, Starkville, MS 39762, USA

4. Prairie Research Unit, Mississippi State University, Prairie, MS 39756, USA

5. Tumbleweed Veterinary Services, PLLC, Amarillo, TX 79159, USA

6. Veterinary Education, Research, and Outreach Center, Texas A&M University, Canyon, TX 79016, USA

Abstract

Bovine respiratory disease (BRD) remains the leading disease within the U.S. beef cattle industry. Marketing decisions made prior to backgrounding may shift BRD incidence into a different phase of production, and the importance of host gene expression on BRD incidence as it relates to marketing strategy is poorly understood. Our objective was to compare the influence of marketing on host transcriptomes measured on arrival at a backgrounding facility on the subsequent probability of being treated for BRD during a 45-day backgrounding phase. This study, through RNA-Seq analysis of blood samples collected on arrival, evaluated gene expression differences between cattle which experienced a commercial auction setting (AUCTION) versus cattle directly shipped to backgrounding from the cow–calf phase (DIRECT); further analyses were conducted to determine differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between cattle which remained clinically healthy during backgrounding (HEALTHY) versus those that required treatment for clinical BRD within 45 days of arrival (BRD). A profound difference in DEGs (n = 2961) was identified between AUCTION cattle compared to DIRECT cattle, regardless of BRD development; these DEGs encoded for proteins involved in antiviral defense (increased in AUCTION), cell growth regulation (decreased in AUCTION), and inflammatory mediation (decreased in AUCTION). Nine and four DEGs were identified between BRD and HEALTHY cohorts in the AUCTION and DIRECT groups, respectively; DEGs between disease cohorts in the AUCTION group encoded for proteins involved in collagen synthesis and platelet aggregation (increased in HEALTHY). Our work demonstrates the clear influence marketing has on host expression and identified genes and mechanisms which may predict BRD risk.

Funder

USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Texas A&M AgriLife Research

Texas A&M University School of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary

Reference72 articles.

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4. An evaluation of the economic effects of bovine respiratory disease on animal performance, carcass traits, and economic outcomes in feedlot cattle defined using four BRD diagnosis methods;McMeniman;J. Anim. Sci.,2020

5. Beef Species symposium: Best management practices for newly weaned calves for improved health and well-being1;Wilson;J. Anim. Sci.,2017

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