N.N. Jonsson
University of Glasgow
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
M. R. S. Fortes; Antonio Reverter; Y. Zhang; Eliza Collis; Shivashankar H. Nagaraj; N.N. Jonsson; Kishore Prayaga; Wes Barris; R. J. Hawken
We describe a systems biology approach for the genetic dissection of complex traits based on applying gene network theory to the results from genome-wide associations. The associations of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) that were individually associated with a primary phenotype of interest, age at puberty in our study, were explored across 22 related traits. Genomic regions were surveyed for genes harboring the selected SNP. As a result, an association weight matrix (AWM) was constructed with as many rows as genes and as many columns as traits. Each {i, j} cell value in the AWM corresponds to the z-score normalized additive effect of the ith gene (via its neighboring SNP) on the jth trait. Columnwise, the AWM recovered the genetic correlations estimated via pedigree-based restricted maximum-likelihood methods. Rowwise, a combination of hierarchical clustering, gene network, and pathway analyses identified genetic drivers that would have been missed by standard genome-wide association studies. Finally, the promoter regions of the AWM-predicted targets of three key transcription factors (TFs), estrogen-related receptor γ (ESRRG), Pal3 motif, bound by a PPAR-γ homodimer, IR3 sites (PPARG), and Prophet of Pit 1, PROP paired-like homeobox 1 (PROP1), were surveyed to identify binding sites corresponding to those TFs. Applied to our case, the AWM results recapitulate the known biology of puberty, captured experimentally validated binding sites, and identified candidate genes and gene–gene interactions for further investigation.
Veterinary Parasitology | 2008
N.N. Jonsson; R.E. Bock; W.K. Jorgensen
Tick fever is an important disease of cattle where Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus acts as a vector for the three causal organisms Babesia bovis, Babesia bigemina and Anaplasma marginale. Bos indicus cattle and their crosses are more resistant to the clinical effects of infection with B. bovis and B. bigemina than are Bos taurus cattle. Resistance is not complete, however, and herds of B. indicus-cross cattle are still at risk of babesiosis in environments where exposure to B. bovis is light in most years but occasionally high. The susceptibility of B. indicus cattle and their crosses to infection with A. marginale is similar to that of B. taurus cattle. In herds of B. indicus cattle and their crosses the infection rate of Babesia spp. and A. marginale is lowered because fewer ticks are likely to attach per day due to reduced numbers of ticks in the field (long-term effect on population, arising from high host resistance) and because a smaller proportion of ticks that do develop to feed on infected cattle will in turn be infected (due to lower parasitaemia). As a consequence, herds of B. indicus cattle are less likely than herds of B. taurus cattle to have high levels of population immunity to babesiosis or anaplasmosis. The effects of acaricide application on the probability of clinical disease due to anaplasmosis and babesiosis are unpredictable and dependent on the prevalence of infection in ticks and in cattle at the time of application. Attempting to manipulate population immunity through the toleration of specific threshold numbers of ticks with the aim of controlling tick fever is not reliable and the justification for acaricide application should be for the control of ticks rather than for tick fever. Vaccination of B. indicus cattle and their crosses is advisable in all areas where ticks exist, although vaccination against B. bigemina is probably not essential in pure B. indicus animals.
Journal of Animal Science | 2011
M. R. S. Fortes; Antonio Reverter; Shivashankar H. Nagaraj; Y. Zhang; N.N. Jonsson; Wes Barris; Sigrid A. Lehnert; G. Boe-Hansen; R. J. Hawken
Harsh tropical environments impose serious challenges on poorly adapted species. In beef cattle, tropical adaptation in the form of temperature and disease resistance, coupled with acclimatization to seasonal and limited forage, comes at a cost to production efficiency. Prominent among these costs is delayed onset of puberty, a challenging phenotype to manipulate through traditional breeding mechanisms. Recently, system biology approaches, including gene networks, have been applied to the genetic dissection of complex phenotypes. We aimed at developing and studying gene networks underlying cattle puberty. Our starting material comprises the association results of ~50,000 SNP on 22 traits, including age at puberty, and 2 cattle breed populations: Brahman (n = 843) and Tropical Composite (n = 866). We defined age at puberty as the age at first corpus luteum (AGECL). By capturing the genes harboring mutations minimally associated (P < 0.05) to AGECL or to a set of traits related with AGECL, we derived a gene network for each breed separately and a third network for the combined data set. At the intersection of the 3 networks, we identified candidate genes and pathways that were common to both breeds. Resulting from these analyses, we identified an enrichment of genes involved in axon guidance, cell adhesion, ErbB signaling, and glutamate activity, pathways that are known to affect pulsatile release of GnRH, which is necessary for the onset of puberty. Furthermore, we employed network connectivity and centrality parameters along with a regulatory impact factor metric to identify the key transcription factors (TF) responsible for the molecular regulation of puberty. As a novel finding, we report 5 TF (HIVEP3, TOX, EYA1, NCOA2, and ZFHX4) located in the network intersecting both breeds and interacting with other TF, forming a regulatory network that harmonizes with the recent literature of puberty. Finally, we support our network predictions with evidence derived from gene expression in hypothalamic tissue of adult cows.
Veterinary Parasitology | 2000
N.N. Jonsson; D. G. Mayer; P.E. Green
A case control study was carried out within a cross-sectional survey designed to investigate the management by Queensland dairy farmers of the cattle tick Boophilus microplus. Although 199 farmers were surveyed, data on acaricide resistance were only obtained from 66 farms. Multiple models were used to predict the probability of acaricide resistance associated with 30 putative risk factors. The region of the state in which the farm was located and the frequency of acaricide application were consistently associated with acaricide resistance. The risk of resistance to all synthetic pyrethroids (Parkhurst strain) was highest in Central Queensland and increased when more than five applications of acaricide were made in the previous year, when spray races were used and when buffalo fly treatments with a synthetic pyrethroid were applied frequently. The probability of resistance to amitraz (Ulam strain) was highest in Central Queensland, increased when more than five applications of acaricide were made in the previous year, and decreased on farms when a hand-spray apparatus was used to apply acaricides to cattle. The probability of resistance to flumethrin (Lamington strain) was highest in the Wide Bay-Burnett region.
Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2009
E.K. Piper; N.N. Jonsson; Cedric Gondro; A.E. Lew-Tabor; P. Moolhuijzen; Megan Vance; L.A. Jackson
ABSTRACT The cattle tick, Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus, is a major threat to the improvement of cattle production in tropical and subtropical countries worldwide. Bos indicus cattle are naturally more resistant to infestation with the cattle tick than are Bos taurus breeds, although considerable variation in resistance occurs within and between breeds. It is not known which genes contribute to the resistant phenotype, nor have immune parameters involved in resistance to R. microplus been fully described for the bovine host. This study was undertaken to determine whether selected cellular and antibody parameters of the peripheral circulation differed between tick-resistant Bos indicus and tick-susceptible Bos taurus cattle following a period of tick infestations. This study demonstrated significant differences between the two breeds with respect to the percentage of cellular subsets comprising the peripheral blood mononuclear cell population, cytokine expression by peripheral blood leukocytes, and levels of tick-specific immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) antibodies measured in the peripheral circulation. In addition to these parameters, the Affymetrix bovine genome microarray was used to analyze gene expression by peripheral blood leukocytes of these animals. The results demonstrate that the Bos indicus cattle developed a stabilized T-cell-mediated response to tick infestation evidenced by their cellular profile and leukocyte cytokine spectrum. The Bos taurus cattle demonstrated cellular and gene expression profiles consistent with a sustained innate, inflammatory response to infestation, although high tick-specific IgG1 titers suggest that these animals have also developed a T-cell response to infestation.
Veterinary Parasitology | 1998
N.N. Jonsson; D. G. Mayer; A.L. Matschoss; P.E. Green; J. Ansell
Forty mid-lactation Holstein-Friesian cows, 100% lot fed, were assigned to four groups for 15 weeks. Two groups of 10 cows were infested each week with a gradually increasing number of Boophilus microplus larvae, while the other two groups were maintained free of ticks. Milk yield and composition (including somatic cell count, SCC), liveweight, dry matter intake, packed cell volume (PCV) and total plasma protein (TPP) were measured throughout the 15 week period. By week 15, control cows produced 2.86 l more milk and 0.14 kg more butterfat each day and had gained 10.6 kg more liveweight than infested cows. Each engorging female tick was estimated to be responsible for the loss of 8.9 ml of daily mild production and 1.0 g of bodyweight over the trial period. Milk composition, PCV and TPP were not significantly affected by cattle tick infestation. The dry matter intake of control cows was 0.83 kg greater than infested cows in week 12.
Proceedings of the Royal Society series B : biological sciences, 2015, Vol.282(1817), pp.20151453 [Peer Reviewed Journal] | 2015
Tyler J. Stevenson; Marjolein Visser; W. Arnold; Perry Barrett; Stephany M. Biello; Alistair Dawson; David L. Denlinger; Davide M. Dominoni; Francis J. P. Ebling; Sarah Elton; Neil P. Evans; Heather M. Ferguson; Russell G. Foster; Michaela Hau; Daniel T. Haydon; David G. Hazlerigg; Paul D. Heideman; J.G.C. Hopcraft; N.N. Jonsson; Noga Kronfeld-Schor; V. Kumar; Gerald A. Lincoln; Ross MacLeod; S.A.M. Martin; Micaela Martinez-Bakker; Randy J. Nelson; Thomas E. Reed; Jane E. Robinson; Daniel Rock; William J. Schwartz
The rhythm of life on earth is shaped by seasonal changes in the environment. Plants and animals show profound annual cycles in physiology, health, morphology, behaviour and demography in response to environmental cues. Seasonal biology impacts ecosystems and agriculture, with consequences for humans and biodiversity. Human populations show robust annual rhythms in health and well-being, and the birth month can have lasting effects that persist throughout life. This review emphasizes the need for a better understanding of seasonal biology against the backdrop of its rapidly progressing disruption through climate change, human lifestyles and other anthropogenic impact. Climate change is modifying annual rhythms to which numerous organisms have adapted, with potential consequences for industries relating to health, ecosystems and food security. Disconcertingly, human lifestyles under artificial conditions of eternal summer provide the most extreme example for disconnect from natural seasons, making humans vulnerable to increased morbidity and mortality. In this review, we introduce scenarios of seasonal disruption, highlight key aspects of seasonal biology and summarize from biomedical, anthropological, veterinary, agricultural and environmental perspectives the recent evidence for seasonal desynchronization between environmental factors and internal rhythms. Because annual rhythms are pervasive across biological systems, they provide a common framework for trans-disciplinary research.
International Journal for Parasitology | 2010
E.K. Piper; L.A. Jackson; Helle Bielefeldt-Ohmann; Cedric Gondro; A.E. Lew-Tabor; N.N. Jonsson
Cattle demonstrate divergent and heritable phenotypes of resistance and susceptibility to infestation with the cattle tick Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) microplus. Bos indicus cattle are generally more resistant to tick infestation than Bos taurus breeds although large variations in resistance can occur within subspecies and within breed. Increased tick resistance has been previously associated with an intense hypersensitivity response in B. taurus breeds; however, the mechanism by which highly resistant B. indicus cattle acquire and sustain high levels of tick resistance remains to be elucidated. Using the commercially available Affymetrix microarray gene expression platform, together with histological examination of the larval attachment site, this study aimed to describe those processes responsible for high levels of tick resistance in Brahman (B. indicus) cattle that differ from those in low-resistance Holstein-Friesian (B. taurus) cattle. We found that genes involved in inflammatory processes and immune responsiveness to infestation by ticks, although up-regulated in tick-infested Holstein-Friesian cattle, were not up-regulated in Brahman cattle. In contrast, genes encoding constituents of the extracellular matrix were up-regulated in Brahmans. Furthermore, the susceptible Holstein-Friesian animals displayed a much greater cellular inflammatory response at the site of larval R. microplus attachment compared with the tick-resistant Brahman cattle.
International Journal for Parasitology | 2010
N.N. Jonsson; C. Cutullé; Sean W. Corley; Jennifer M. Seddon
A mutation in the domain II S4-5 linker region of the para-sodium channel gene has been associated previously with synthetic pyrethroid (SP) resistance in the cattle tick (Rhipicephalus microplus) in Australia. This is a C→A mutation at nucleotide position 190, which results in a leucine to isoleucine amino acid substitution (L64I). In a survey of 15 cattle tick populations with known SP resistance status, sourced from Queensland and New South Wales in Australia, there was a strong relationship (r=0.98) between the proportion of ticks carrying the L64I homozygous resistant genotype and the survival percentage after exposure to a discriminating concentration of cypermethrin in the bioassay, as expected. However, among populations resistant only to flumethrin, the L64I homozygous genotype was not found. The sequence obtained for a 167 bp region including domain II S4-5 linker in flumethrin-resistant ticks identified a G→T non-synonymous mutation at nucleotide position 214 that results in a glycine to valine substitution (G72V). The frequency of the G72V homozygous genotype in each population was found to be moderately related to the survival percentage at the discriminating concentration of flumethrin in the larval packet test (r=0.74). However, a much stronger relationship between genotype and resistance to flumethrin was observed when the heterozygotes of L64I and G72V were added to the G72V homozygotes (r=0.93). These results suggest that there is an interaction between the two mutations in the same gene, such that flumethrin resistance might be conferred by either two copies of the G72V mutation or by being a L64I and G72V heterozygote.
Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology | 2008
E.K. Piper; L.A. Jackson; Neil H. Bagnall; Kritaya Kongsuwan; Ala E. Lew; N.N. Jonsson
The cattle tick Rhipicephalus microplus (formerly Boophilus microplus) is responsible for severe production losses to the cattle industry worldwide. It has long been known that different breeds of cattle can resist tick infestation to varying degrees; however, the mechanisms by which resistant cattle prevent heavy infestation are largely unknown. The aim of this study was to determine whether gene expression varied significantly between skin sampling sites (neck, chest and tail region), and whether changes in gene expression could be detected in samples taken at tick attachment sites (tick attached to skin sample) compared with samples taken from non-attachment sites (no tick attachment). We present here the results of an experiment examining the expression of a panel of forty-four genes in skin sections taken from Bos indicus (Brahman) cattle of known high resistance, and Bos taurus (Holstein-Friesian) cattle of known low resistance to the cattle tick. The forty-four genes chosen for this study included genes known to be involved in several immune processes, some structural genes, and some genes previously suggested to be of importance in tick resistance by other researchers. The expression of fifteen gene transcripts increased significantly in Holstein-Friesian skin samples at tick attachment sites. The higher expression of many genes involved in innate inflammatory processes in the Holstein-Friesian animals at tick attachment sites suggests this breed is exhibiting a non-directed pathological response to infestation. Of the forty-four genes analysed, no transcripts were detected in higher abundance at tick attachment sites in the Brahman cattle compared with similar samples from the Holstein-Friesian group, nor difference between attachment site and non-attachment site samples within the Brahman group. The results presented here suggest that the means by which these two cattle breeds respond to tick infestation differ and warrant further investigation.