G. D. Snowder
Agricultural Research Service
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Featured researches published by G. D. Snowder.
Science | 1996
Noelle E. Cockett; Sam P. Jackson; T. L. Shay; Frédéric Farnir; Stéphane Berghmans; G. D. Snowder; D. Nielsen; Michel Georges
An inheritable muscular hypertrophy was recently described in sheep and shown to be determined by the callipyge gene mapped to ovine chromosome 18. Here, the callipyge phenotype was found to be characterized by a nonmendelian inheritance pattern, referred to as polar overdominance, where only heterozygous individuals having inherited the callipyge mutation from their sire express the phenotype. The possible role of parental imprinting in the determinism of polar overdominance is envisaged.
Journal of Animal Science | 2002
K. J. Hanford; L. D. Van Vleck; G. D. Snowder
Genetic parameters from both single-trait and bivariate analyses for prolificacy, weight, and wool traits were estimated using REML with animal models for Targhee sheep from data collected from 1950 to 1998 at the U.S. Sheep Experiment Station, Dubois, ID. Breeding values from both single-trait and seven-trait analyses calculated with the parameters estimated from the single-trait and bivariate analyses were compared across years of birth with respect to genetic trends. The numbers of observations were 38,625 for litter size at birth and litter size at weaning, 33,994 for birth weight, 32,715 for weaning weight, 36,807 for fleece weight and fleece grade, and 3,341 for staple length. Direct heritability estimates from single-trait analyses were 0.10 for litter size at birth, 0.07 for litter size at weaning, 0.25 for birth weight, 0.22 for weaning weight, 0.54 for fleece weight, 0.41 for fleece grade, and 0.65 for staple length. Estimate of direct genetic correlation between litter size at birth and weaning was 0.77 and between birth and weaning weights was 0.52. The estimate of genetic correlation between fleece weight and staple length was positive (0.54), but was negative between fleece weight and fleece grade (-0.47) and between staple length and fleece grade (-0.69). Estimates of genetic correlations were near zero between birth weight and litter size traits and small and positive between weaning weight and litter size traits. Fleece weight was slightly and negatively correlated with both litter size traits. Fleece grade was slightly and positively correlated with both litter size traits. Estimates of correlations between staple length and litter size at birth (-0.14) and litter size at weaning (0.05) were small. Estimates of correlations between weight traits and fleece weight were positive and low to moderate. Estimates of correlations between weight traits and fleece grade were negative and small, whereas estimates between weight traits and staple length were positive and small. Estimated breeding values averaged by year of birth from both the single- and seven-trait analyses for the prolificacy and weight traits increased over time, whereas those for fleece weight decreased slightly and those for the other wool traits were unchanged. Estimated changes in breeding values over time did not differ substantially for the single-trait and seven-trait analyses, except for traits highly correlated with another trait that was responding to selection.
Genetics Selection Evolution | 2005
Noelle E. Cockett; Maria Smit; Christopher A. Bidwell; Karin Segers; Tracy L Hadfield; G. D. Snowder; Michel Georges; Carole Charlier
Genetic strategies to improve the profitability of sheep operations have generally focused on traits for reproduction. However, natural mutations exist in sheep that affect muscle growth and development, and the exploitation of these mutations in breeding strategies has the potential to significantly improve lamb-meat quality. The best-documented mutation for muscle development in sheep is callipyge (CLPG), which causes a postnatal muscle hypertrophy that is localized to the pelvic limbs and loin. Enhanced skeletal muscle growth is also observed in animals with the Carwell (or rib-eye muscling) mutation, and a double-muscling phenotype has been documented for animals of the Texel sheep breed. However, the actual mutations responsible for these muscular hypertrophy phenotypes in sheep have yet to be identified, and further characterization of the genetic basis for these phenotypes will provide insight into the biological control of muscle growth and body composition.
Small Ruminant Research | 1998
Scott J. Brodie; Andres de la Concha-Bermejillo; G. D. Snowder; James C. DeMartini
Abstract Lentiviruses, a genus of retroviruses, include the agents that cause ovine progressive pneumonia or maedi. Infection is characterized by long incubation periods and insidious, slowly progressive clinical courses resulting in chronic degenerative diseases. The ovine lentiviruses are widespread among sheep in North America, yet their significance to livestock production is currently not well defined. Lentiviruses persist and replicate in the presence of host specific immune responses and cause immune-mediated lesions in several organ systems. Due to this unusual relationship with their host, the diagnosis, control and treatment of these infections is difficult and expensive. Scientific studies on the biology of ovine lentiviruses (OvLV) and their complex relationship with the host are yielding new approaches to the detection of infected animals and methods for study of the epizootiology and control of OvLV-related diseases. We summarize some of the known biological properties of the virus, spectrum of clinical features of the diseases, current concepts of disease pathogenesis, economic importance, and strategies used to diagnose and control OvLV infections.
Veterinary Microbiology | 2001
Hong Li; Yuping Hua; G. D. Snowder; Timothy B. Crawford
A recently developed competitive PCR for ovine herpesvirus 2 (OvHV-2) was used to examine the levels of viral DNA in nasal secretions and peripheral blood leukocytes (PBL) of lambs and adult sheep. Viral DNA first appeared in the PBL of most lambs after about 3 months of age and the levels remained relatively constant thereafter. In most of the lambs (83%, n=12), viral DNA was undetectable by PCR in nasal secretions prior to 5 months of age. A dramatic rise of OvHV-2 DNA levels in the nasal secretions occurred starting at 5-6 months of age, which peaked at approximately 7 months. The highest level recorded in lamb nasal secretions was 7.5x10(8)copies/2microg DNA which were 75,000-100,000-fold higher than the levels in PBL of the same lambs. In adult sheep (n=10), the viral DNA levels in both PBL and nasal secretions were relatively stable over the 13-month period of the study, which included a lambing season. The data strongly suggest that neonatal lambs are not an important source for the transmission of OvHV-2 to clinically susceptible species, and that the nasal cavity is an important portal for shedding of infectious OvHV-2 in sheep. Furthermore, this study failed to identify a seasonal pattern in levels of viral DNA in nasal secretions or PBL of adult sheep that would provide a basis for the traditionally held belief that clinical cases of malignant catarrhal fever are significantly associated with lambing ewes.
Archives of Virology | 1993
S. J. Brodie; L. D. Pearson; G. D. Snowder; James C. DeMartini
SummaryTo correlate the presence of ovine lentivirus (OvLV) as detected by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with detection of antibody, 42 sheep from a flock with enzootic OvLV infection were studied. The results of agar gel immunodiffusion (AGID), ELISA, and immunoblotting assays were compared, and leukocytes (blood, bone marrow, lymph node, and lung cells) were assessed for viral DNA by PCR usingpol and LTR primers; amplified products were detected by specific DNA and RNA probes. Based on the number of animals that had detectable viral DNA, the specificities of AGID, ELISA, and immunoblotting were 77%, 92%, and 95 or 100% (depending on which criterion was used to interpret immunoblot results), respectively. Only in animals with OvLV-associated disease was OvLV DNA detected in leukocyte DNA prior to the amplification of virus in culture and only in this group was high titer antibody detected to the OvLV major surface (gp 105) and transmembrane (gp 55) antigens. Animals that were both antibody and PCR-negative lacked histopathologic evidence of disease. From this study there was no indication that OvLV infection without the development of antibody occurs, and detection of OvLV DNA in animals with weak or partial serological reactions likely indicates early OvLV infection rather than false-positive PCR results.
Veterinary Microbiology | 1999
Hong Li; G. D. Snowder; Timothy B. Crawford
The study was designed to better define the variables affecting the success of the establishment of ovine herpesvirus 2 (OHV-2)-free sheep flocks. A total of 38 lambs born to OHV-2-positive ewes was selected and divided into four groups. Three groups of 10 lambs each were separated from the positive ewes at 2, 2.5 and 3 months of age, respectively, and maintained in isolation facilities. One group of eight remained in the positive flock as controls. Peripheral blood samples from each lamb were examined regularly by PCR for OHV-2 DNA. All lambs (100%) that were weaned and maintained in isolation from the ages of 2, 2.5 and 3 months remained negative until the termination of the experiment at 1 year of age. One lamb was discovered to be PCR-positive on the day of isolation at 2.5 months of age, and was promptly removed from the isolation group. In contrast, all lambs (100%) that remained with the flock became PCR-positive by 6 months of age. The data confirmed that, with rare exceptions, separation of lambs from OHV-2 infected animals at around 2 months of age reliably yields OHV-2-free sheep. Appropriate PCR monitoring will enable the rare exceptions to be removed from the group, and is recommended as a safety measure.
Veterinary Microbiology | 2000
Hong Li; G. D. Snowder; Donal O’Toole; Timothy B. Crawford
Previous studies from this laboratory have defined the pattern of acquisition of ovine herpesvirus 2 (OHV-2) in lambs under natural flock conditions. This study examined the question of whether OHV-2 could be transmitted between adult sheep. Two potential routes of transmission were examined: (1) direct inoculation of either viable leukocytes or whole blood from OHV-2 positive sheep, and (2) horizontal transmission through natural contact with OHV-2 positive sheep. Two groups of OHV-2 negative adult sheep were inoculated with material from infected sheep, one with 5x10(8) viable peripheral blood leukocytes (PBL), and the other with 100 ml of whole peripheral blood. No PCR signals were detected in any of the three sheep inoculated with the PBL during the 20 weeks following inoculation. In the group of five sheep inoculated with whole blood, two became PCR-positive at 7 and 8 weeks post-inoculation, respectively, and the remaining three sheep maintained their negative status until termination of the experiment at 20 weeks post-inoculation. In two experiments conducted in different flocks, a total of 20 adult sheep were used to examine horizontal transmission by contact; all animals became PCR-positive within 12 months of mixing the uninfected and infected animals. The results of these experiments support two conclusions. First, the susceptibility to OHV-2 is not limited to young lambs; adult sheep remain fully susceptible. Second, the fact that whole blood, but not PBL, from infected sheep was able to transmit the infection to only two of five inoculated sheep suggests that the infection in peripheral blood cells may be largely non-productive.
Journal of Liquid Chromatography & Related Technologies | 2002
W. E. Neff; Wm. Craig Byrdwell; Kevin R. Steidley; G. R. List; G. D. Snowder
Triacylglycerol (TAG) compositions, as mole percent, were obtained by reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC), coupled with atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry (APCI-MS) of lard and mutton tallow fractions under consideration for food formulation products. Accurate identification and quantitation of these TAG compositions were obtained and proved by comparison of the fatty acid composition calculated from the TAG composition which was obtained by APCI-MS with the fatty acid composition, and converted to mole percent as obtained by gas chromatography of the methyl esters of the transmethylated oils. Average absolute errors with respect to TAG quantitation and identification were less than one percent. Our study identified and quantitated the TAG equal to and greater than 0.1% concentration. Concentration of TAG with various fatty unsaturated (U) and saturated (S) fatty acids with TAG, designated as these species UUU, UUS, USS, and SSS, can be determined accurately from RP-HPLC/APCI-MS of the actual TAG species. These TAG species UUU, UUS, USS, and SSS affect the physical properties of food formulation fats.
Animal Health Research Reviews | 2009
G. D. Snowder
Abstract The heritability estimates for resistance and/or susceptibility to bovine respiratory disease (BRD) are small, suggesting response to direct selection will be slow. The number of mammalian genetic markers associated with resistance to specific pathogens or improved immunity is increasing and will provide additional information for developing selection criteria for producing animals with an innate resistance to BRD. Environmental and management factors play significant roles in the prevalence of BRD and must be considered in a holistic approach to reducing BRD. Although no single solution for preventing BRD is likely to be discovered in the immediate future, the long-term outlook appears very promising.