Variants in Nucleotide Sequences; Gene Expression; and Hematological, Immune, and Antioxidant Biomarkers Linked to Pneumonia Risk in Holstein Calves
Ahmed El-Sayed, Attia Eissa, Doaa Ebrahim, Ahmed Ateya, Hossam Gadalla, Hanan M. Alharbi, Khairiah M. Alwutayd, Manal A. Babaker, Aya Aly Elzeer

TL;DR
This study identifies genetic and immune markers in calves that are associated with pneumonia risk, offering a potential strategy for reducing the disease through selective breeding.
Contribution
The study reveals novel associations between nucleotide sequence variants, gene expression, and immune/antioxidant biomarkers linked to pneumonia in calves.
Findings
Pneumonic calves showed significant differences in hematological, immunological, and antioxidant biomarkers compared to healthy calves.
Genes like IL1α, IL-1β, IL-6, IFN-γ, and TNF-α were upregulated in pneumonic calves, while IL10, PRDX6, ATG7, and NDUFS6 were downregulated.
Nucleotide sequence differences in immunity and antioxidant genes were observed between pneumonic and healthy calves.
Abstract
Pneumonia is a serious problem that influences the health and productivity of calves and results in various losses. This work aimed to examine the immunological and antioxidant responses, as well as genetic and molecular differences, in calves that are prone to pneumonia. Out of the 225 calves, 180 Holstein calves had respiratory symptoms, while 45 cases seemed to be healthy. Blood was collected from the diseased and apparently healthy calves for CBC and RNA extraction. The pneumonic calves had significantly different hematological, immunological, and antioxidant blood levels; expression patterns; and SNPs of genes related to immunity and antioxidants when compared to healthy calves. These findings offer a practical strategy for reducing the incidence of pneumonia in calves by selective breeding based on genetic markers. Pneumonia is a major issue that affects calves’ health and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrobial infections and disease research · T-cell and Retrovirus Studies · Vector-Borne Animal Diseases
