Jane de Oliveira Peixoto
Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jane de Oliveira Peixoto.
Animal | 2017
J. A. P. Marchesi; M. E. Buzanskas; M. E. Cantão; A. M. G. Ibelli; Jane de Oliveira Peixoto; L. B. Joaquim; Gabriel Costa Monteiro Moreira; T. F. Godoy; A. P. Sbardella; E. A. P. Figueiredo; Luiz Lehmann Coutinho; Danísio Prado Munari; M. C. Ledur
Genomic regions under high selective pressure present specific runs of homozygosity (ROH), which provide valuable information on the genetic mechanisms underlying the adaptation to environment imposed challenges. In broiler chickens, the adaptation to conventional production systems in tropical environments lead the animals with favorable genotypes to be naturally selected, increasing the frequency of these alleles in the next generations. In this study, ~1400 chickens from a paternal broiler line were genotyped with the 600 K Affymetrix® Axiom® high-density (HD) genotyping array for estimation of linkage disequilibrium (LD), effective population size (N e ), inbreeding and ROH. The average LD between adjacent single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in all autosomes was 0.37, and the LD decay was higher in microchromosomes followed by intermediate and macrochromosomes. The N e of the ancestral population was high and declined over time maintaining a sufficient number of animals to keep the inbreeding coefficient of this population at low levels. The ROH analysis revealed genomic regions that harbor genes associated with homeostasis maintenance and immune system mechanisms, which may have been selected in response to heat stress. Our results give a comprehensive insight into the relationship between shared ROH regions and putative regions related to survival and production traits in a paternal broiler line selected for over 20 years. These findings contribute to the understanding of the effects of environmental and artificial selection in shaping the distribution of functional variants in the chicken genome.
Veterinary Record | 2016
R. Zanella; N. Morés; M. A. Z. Morés; Jane de Oliveira Peixoto; Eraldo Lourenso Zanella; J. R. Ciacci-Zanella; A. M. G. Ibelli; D. Gava; M. E. Cantao; M. C. Ledur
Porcine periweaning-failure-to-thrive syndrome (PFTS) is a condition that affects newly weaned piglets. It is characterised by a progressive debilitation leading to death, in the absence of infectious, nutritional, management or environmental factors. In this study, we present the first report of PFTS in South America and the results of a genome-wide association study to identify the genetic markers associated with the appearance of this condition in a crossbred swine population. Four chromosomal regions were associated with PFTS predisposition, one located on SSCX, one on SSC8, and the two other regions on SSC14. Regions on SSC8 and SSC14 harbour important functional candidate genes involved in human depression and might have an important role in PFTS. Our findings contribute to the increasing knowledge about this syndrome, which has been investigated since 2007, and to the identification of the aetiology of this disease.
Veterinary Sciences | 2018
Luisa Lago; Arthur Nery da Silva; Eraldo Lourenso Zanella; Mariana Groke Marques; Jane de Oliveira Peixoto; Marcos da Silva; M. C. Ledur; Ricardo Zanella
In this paper, we have used two approaches to detect genetic associations with scrotal hernias in commercial pigs. Firstly, we have investigated the effects of runs of homozygosity (ROH) with the appearance of scrotal hernias, followed by a Genome Wide Association Study (GWAS). The phenotype classification was based on visual appearance of scrotal hernias. Each affected animal was matched to a healthy control from the same pen. In the total, 68 animals were genotyped using the Porcine SNP60 Beadchip, out of those, 41 animals had the presence of hernias and 27 were healthy animals. Fifteen animals were removed from the analysis due to differences in genetic background, leaving 18 healthy animals and 35 piglets with scrotal hernia. Further, the detection of extended haplotypes shared ROH were conducted for health (control) and affected (case) animals and a permutation test was used to test whether the ROH segments were more frequent in case/case pairs than non-case/case pairs. Using the ROH, we have identified an association (p = 0.019) on chromosome 2(SSC2) being segregated on animals with the presence of scrotal hernias. Using a GWAS, a region composed by 3 SNPs on the sexual chromosome X (SSCX) were associated with scrotal hernias (p < 1.6 × 10−5), this region harbors the Androgen Receptor Gene (AR).
PLOS ONE | 2018
William Raphael Lorenzetti; A. M. G. Ibelli; Jane de Oliveira Peixoto; M. A. Z. Mores; I. R. Savoldi; Kamilla Bleil do Carmo; Haniel Cedraz de Oliveira; M. C. Ledur
The use of reference genes is required for relative quantification in gene expression analysis and since the stability of these genes could be variable depending on the experimental design, it has become indispensable to test the reliability of endogenous genes. Therefore, this study evaluated 10 reference candidate genes in two different experimental conditions in order to obtain stable genes to be used as reference in expression studies related to scrotal hernias in pigs. Two independent experiments were performed: one with 30 days-old MS115 pigs and the other with 60 days-old Landrace pigs. The inguinal ring/canal was collected, frozen and further submitted to real-time PCR analysis (qPCR). For the reference genes stability evaluation, four tools were used: GeNorm in the SLqPCR, BestKeeper, NormFinder and Comparative CT. A general ranking was generated using the BruteAggreg function of R environment. In this study, the RPL19 was one of the most reliable endogenous genes for both experiments. The breed/age effects influenced the expression stability of candidate reference genes evaluated in the inguinal ring of pigs. Therefore, this study reinforces the importance of evaluating the stability of several endogenous genes previous their use, since a consensual set of reference genes is not easily obtained. Here, two sets of genes are recommended: RPL19, RPL32 and H3F3A for 30-days MS115 and PPIA and RPL19 for the 60 days-old Landrace pigs. This is the first study using the inguinal ring tissue and the results can be useful as an indicative for other studies working with gene expression in this tissue.
SpringerPlus | 2014
Marcelo Batista Fornari; Ricardo Zanella; A. M. G. Ibelli; Lana T Fernandes; M. E. Cantao; Vanete Thomaz-Soccol; M. C. Ledur; Jane de Oliveira Peixoto
Archive | 2012
Marcelo Batista Fornari; Karina Luzia Neis; Jorge Augusto; Petroli Marchesi; Vanete Thomaz Soccol; Jane de Oliveira Peixoto
Archive | 2012
Jane de Oliveira Peixoto; Edimara Peri; Arlei Coldebella; Alexandre Luiz Tessmann; Luiz Lehmann Coutinho; M. C. Ledur
Proceedings of the World Congress on Genetics Applied to Livestock Production | 2018
Lana T Fernandes; R. K. Ono; A. M. G. Ibelli; Essamai Lagos; M. A. Z. Mores; Maurício Egídio Cantão; William Raphael Lorenzetti; Jane de Oliveira Peixoto; Victor Pedrosa; M. C. Ledur
Proceedings of the World Congress on Genetics Applied to Livestock Production | 2018
R. K. Ono; Adriana Mércia Guaratini Ibelli; Maurício Egídio Cantão; Jane de Oliveira Peixoto; Bruna Sollero; Diego Surek; Gabriel Costa Monteiro Moreira; T. F. Godoy; Luiz Lehmann Coutinho; M. C. Ledur
Ciência & Tecnologia | 2016
Alejandro Barrera Carvajal; Jorge Augusto Petroli Marchesi; Priscila Arrigucci Bernardes; Maurício Egídio Cantão; Jane de Oliveira Peixoto; Elsio Antonio Pereira de Figueiredo; M. C. Ledur; Danísio Prado Munari
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Elsio Antonio Pereira de Figueiredo
Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária
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