13 results on '"Buggiotti, Laura"'
Search Results
2. Molecular identification of vaginal fluid by microbial signature
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Giampaoli, Saverio, Berti, Andrea, Valeriani, Federica, Gianfranceschi, Gianluca, Piccolella, Antonio, Buggiotti, Laura, Rapone, Cesare, Valentini, Alessio, Ripani, Luigi, and Romano Spica, Vincenzo
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- 2012
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3. Copy Number Variants in Two Northernmost Cattle Breeds Are Related to Their Adaptive Phenotypes.
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Buggiotti, Laura, Yudin, Nikolay S., and Larkin, Denis M.
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DNA copy number variations , *CATTLE breeding , *LOCUS (Genetics) , *CATTLE breeds , *PHENOTYPES , *GENE ontology - Abstract
Copy number variations (CNVs) are genomic structural variants with potential functional and evolutionary effects on phenotypes. In this study, we report the identification and characterization of CNVs from the whole-genome resequencing data of two northernmost cattle breeds from Russia: the Yakut and Kholmogory cattle and their phylogenetically most related breeds, Hanwoo and Holstein, respectively. Comparisons of the CNV regions (CNVRs) among the breeds led to the identification of breed-specific CNVRs shared by cold-adapted Kholmogory and Yakut cattle. An investigation of their overlap with genes, regulatory domains, conserved non-coding elements (CNEs), enhancers, and quantitative trait loci (QTLs) was performed to further explore breed-specific biology and adaptations. We found CNVRs enriched for gene ontology terms related to adaptation to environments in both the Kholmogory and Yakut breeds and related to thermoregulation specifically in Yakut cattle. Interestingly, the latter has also been supported when exploring the enrichment of breed-specific CNVRs in the regulatory domains and enhancers, CNEs, and QTLs implying the potential contribution of CNVR to the Yakut and Kholmogory cattle breeds' adaptation to a harsh environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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4. Transcriptomic Analysis of Circulating Leukocytes Obtained during the Recovery from Clinical Mastitis Caused by Escherichia coli in Holstein Dairy Cows.
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Cheng, Zhangrui, Palma-Vera, Sergio, Buggiotti, Laura, Salavati, Mazdak, Becker, Frank, Werling, Dirk, and Wathes, D. Claire
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BOVINE mastitis ,MASTITIS ,ERYTHROCYTES ,DAIRY cattle ,GTPASE-activating protein ,ESCHERICHIA coli ,LEUCOCYTES - Abstract
Simple Summary: Escherichia coli is a bacterium which infects cow udders causing clinical mastitis, a potentially severe disease with welfare and economic consequences. During an infection, white blood cells (leukocytes) enter the udder to provide immune defence and assist tissue repair. We sequenced RNA derived from circulating leukocytes to investigate which genes are up- or down-regulated in dairy cows with naturally occurring cases of clinical mastitis in comparison with healthy control cows from the same farm. We also looked for genetic variations between infected and healthy cows. Blood samples were taken either EARLY (around 10 days) or LATE (after 4 weeks) during the recovery phase after diagnosis. Many genes (1090) with immune and inflammatory functions were up-regulated during the EARLY phase. By the LATE phase only 29 genes were up-regulated including six haemoglobin subunits, possibly important for the production of new red blood corpuscles. Twelve genetic variations which were associated with an increased or decreased expression of some important immune genes were identified between the infected and control cows. These results show that the initial inflammatory response to E. coli continued for at least 10 days despite the cows having received prompt veterinary treatment, but they had largely recovered within 4 weeks. Genetic differences between cows may predispose some animals to infection. The risk and severity of clinical infection with Escherichia coli as a causative pathogen for bovine mastitis is influenced by the hosts' phenotypic and genotypic variables. We used RNA-Seq analysis of circulating leukocytes to investigate global transcriptomic profiles and genetic variants from Holstein cows with naturally occurring cases of clinical mastitis, diagnosed using clinical symptoms and milk microbiology. Healthy lactation-matched cows served as controls (CONT, n = 6). Blood samples were collected at two time periods during the recovery phase post diagnosis: EARLY (10.3 ± 1.8 days, n = 6) and LATE (46.7 ± 11 days, n = 3). Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between the groups were identified using CLC Genomics Workbench V21 and subjected to enrichment analysis. Variant calling was performed following GATKv3.8 best practice. The comparison of E. coli(+) EARLY and CONT cows found the up-regulation of 1090 DEGs, mainly with immune and inflammatory functions. The key signalling pathways involved NOD-like and interleukin-1 receptors and chemokines. Many up-regulated DEGs encoded antimicrobial peptides including cathelicidins, beta-defensins, S100 calcium binding proteins, haptoglobin and lactoferrin. Inflammation had largely resolved in the E. coli(+) LATE group, with only 29 up-regulated DEGs. Both EARLY and LATE cows had up-regulated DEGs encoding ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporters and haemoglobin subunits were also up-regulated in LATE cows. Twelve candidate genetic variants were identified in DEGs between the infected and CONT cows. Three were in contiguous genes WIPI1, ARSG and SLC16A6 on BTA19. Two others (RAC2 and ARHGAP26) encode a Rho-family GTPase and Rho GTPase-activating protein 26. These results show that the initial inflammatory response to E. coli continued for at least 10 days despite prompt treatment and provide preliminary evidence for genetic differences between cows that may predispose them to infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Disease prevention efforts on Welsh cattle farms are influenced by farmdemographics.
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Paton, Neil, Schaefer, K. Aleks, Armitage-Chan, Elizabeth A., Cooper, Hannah, and Buggiotti, Laura
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- 2022
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6. High Degree of Transferability of 86 Newly Developed Zebra Finch EST-Linked Microsatellite Markers in 8 Bird Species
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Karaiskou, Nikoletta, Buggiotti, Laura, Leder, Erica, and Primmer, Craig R.
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- 2008
7. Comparison of the transcriptome in circulating leukocytes in early lactation between primiparous and multiparous cows provides evidence for age-related changes.
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Buggiotti, Laura, Cheng, Zhangrui, Salavati, Mazdak, Wathes, Claire D., the Genotype plus Environment Consortium, Fahey, Alan, Crisà, Alessandra, Fouladi, Ali, Wylie, Alistair, Vanlierde, Amelie, Fogh, Anders, Santoro, Andreia, Cromie, Andrew, Van Laere, Anne-Sophie, Pearn, Armin, Evertson, Arnold, Laine, Aurelie, Bernardo, Beatriz Sanz, Moioli, Bianca, and Vanranst, Bonny
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LACTATION , *TRANSCRIPTOMES , *COWS , *LACTATION in cattle , *LEUCOCYTES , *DNA replication , *ZINC-finger proteins - Abstract
Background: Previous studies have identified many immune pathways which are consistently altered in humans and model organisms as they age. Dairy cows are often culled at quite young ages due to an inability to cope adequately with metabolic and infectious diseases, resulting in reduced milk production and infertility. Improved longevity is therefore a desirable trait which would benefit both farmers and their cows. This study analysed the transcriptome derived from RNA-seq data of leukocytes obtained from Holstein cows in early lactation with respect to lactation number. Results: Samples were divided into three lactation groups for analysis: i) primiparous (PP, n = 53), ii) multiparous in lactations 2–3 (MP 2–3, n = 121), and iii) MP in lactations 4–7 (MP > 3, n = 55). Leukocyte expression was compared between PP vs MP > 3 cows with MP 2–3 as background using DESeq2 followed by weighted gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA). Seven modules were significantly correlated (r ≥ 0.25) to the trait lactation number. Genes from the modules which were more highly expressed in either the PP or MP > 3 cows were pooled, and the gene lists subjected to David functional annotation cluster analysis. The top three clusters from modules more highly expressed in the PP cows all involved regulation of gene transcription, particularly zinc fingers. Another cluster included genes encoding enzymes in the mitochondrial beta-oxidation pathway. Top clusters up-regulated in MP > 3 cows included the terms Glycolysis/Gluconeogenesis, C-type lectin, and Immunity. Differentially expressed candidate genes for ageing previously identified in the human blood transcriptome up-regulated in PP cows were mainly associated with T-cell function (CCR7, CD27, IL7R, CAMK4, CD28), mitochondrial ribosomal proteins (MRPS27, MRPS9, MRPS31), and DNA replication and repair (WRN). Those up-regulated in MP > 3 cows encoded immune defence proteins (LYZ, CTSZ, SREBF1, GRN, ANXA5, ADARB1). Conclusions: Genes and pathways associated with lactation number in cows were identified for the first time to date, and we found that many were comparable to those known to be associated with ageing in humans and model organisms. We also detected changes in energy utilization and immune responses in leukocytes from older cows. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. Demographic History, Adaptation, and NRAP Convergent Evolution at Amino Acid Residue 100 in the World Northernmost Cattle from Siberia.
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Buggiotti, Laura, Yurchenko, Andrey A, Yudin, Nikolay S, Jagt, Christy J Vander, Vorobieva, Nadezhda V, Kusliy, Mariya A, Vasiliev, Sergei K, Rodionov, Andrey N, Boronetskaya, Oksana I, Zinovieva, Natalia A, Graphodatsky, Alexander S, Daetwyler, Hans D, and Larkin, Denis M
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CATTLE breeding ,GENETIC variation ,BIOLOGICAL variation ,CLIMATE change ,ANIMAL breeding - Abstract
Native cattle breeds represent an important cultural heritage. They are a reservoir of genetic variation useful for properly responding to agriculture needs in the light of ongoing climate changes. Evolutionary processes that occur in response to extreme environmental conditions could also be better understood using adapted local populations. Herein, different evolutionary histories of the world northernmost native cattle breeds from Russia were investigated. They highlighted Kholmogory as a typical taurine cattle, whereas Yakut cattle separated from European taurines approximately 5,000 years ago and contain numerous ancestral and some novel genetic variants allowing their adaptation to harsh conditions of living above the Polar Circle. Scans for selection signatures pointed to several common gene pathways related to adaptation to harsh climates in both breeds. But genes affected by selection from these pathways were mostly different. A Yakut cattle breed-specific missense mutation in a highly conserved NRAP gene represents a unique example of a young amino acid residue convergent change shared with at least 16 species of hibernating/cold-adapted mammals from six distinct phylogenetic orders. This suggests a convergent evolution event along the mammalian phylogenetic tree and fast fixation in a single isolated cattle population exposed to a harsh climate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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9. Global transcriptomic profiles of circulating leucocytes in early lactation cows with clinical or subclinical mastitis.
- Author
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Cheng, Zhangrui, Buggiotti, Laura, Salavati, Mazdak, Marchitelli, Cinzia, Palma-Vera, Sergio, Wylie, Alistair, Takeda, Haruko, Tang, Lijing, Crowe, Mark A., Wathes, D. Claire, GplusE consortium, Crowe, Mark, McLoughlin, Niamh, Fahey, Alan, Matthews, Elizabeth, Santoro, Andreia, Byrne, Colin, Rudd, Pauline, O'Flaherty, Roisin, and Hallinan, Sinead
- Abstract
Bovine mastitis, an inflammatory disease of the mammary gland, is classified as subclinical or clinical. Circulating neutrophils are recruited to the udder to combat infection. We compared the transcriptomic profiles in circulating leukocytes between healthy cows and those with naturally occurring subclinical or clinical mastitis. Holstein Friesian dairy cows from six farms in EU countries were recruited. Based on milk somatic cell count and clinical records, cows were classified as healthy (n = 147), subclinically (n = 45) or clinically mastitic (n = 22). Circulating leukocyte RNA was sequenced with Illumina NextSeq single end reads (30 M). Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between the groups were identified using CLC Genomics Workbench V21, followed by GO enrichment analysis. Both subclinical and clinical mastitis caused significant changes in the leukocyte transcriptome, with more intensive changes attributed to clinical mastitis. We detected 769 DEGs between clinical and healthy groups, 258 DEGs between subclinical and healthy groups and 193 DEGs between clinical and subclinical groups. Most DEGs were associated with cell killing and immune processes. Many upregulated DEGs in clinical mastitis encoded antimicrobial peptides (AZU1, BCL3, CAMP, CATHL1, CATHL2, CATHL4,CATHL5, CATHL6, CCL1, CXCL2, CXCL13, DEFB1, DEFB10, DEFB4A, DEFB7, LCN2, PGLYRP1, PRTN3, PTX3, S100A8, S100A9, S100A12, SLC11A1, TF and LTF) which were not upregulated in subclinical mastitis. The use of transcriptomic profiles has identified a much greater up-regulation of genes encoding antimicrobial peptides in circulating leukocytes of cows with naturally occurring clinical compared with subclinical mastitis. These could play a key role in combatting disease organisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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10. Genetic Loci Involved in Antibody Response to Mycobacterium avium ssp. paratuberculosis in Cattle.
- Author
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Minozzi, Giulietta, Buggiotti, Laura, Stella, Alessandra, Strozzi, Francesco, Luini, Mario, and Williams, John L.
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MYCOBACTERIUM avium , *PARATUBERCULOSIS , *IMMUNOGLOBULINS , *ENTERITIS , *IMMUNE response , *ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay , *MILK yield , *WEIGHT loss , *CHROMOSOMES , *GENOMES - Abstract
Background: Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP) causes chronic enteritis in a wide range of animal species. In cattle, MAP causes a chronic disease called Johne's disease, or paratuberculosis, that is not treatable and the efficacy of vaccine control is controversial. The clinical phase of the disease is characterised by diarrhoea, weight loss, drop in milk production and eventually death. Susceptibility to MAP infection is heritable with heritability estimates ranging from 0.06 to 0.10. There have been several studies over the last few years that have identified genetic loci putatively associated with MAP susceptibility, however, with the availability of genome-wide high density SNP maker panels it is now possible to carry out association studies that have higher precision. Methodology/Principal Findings: The objective of the current study was to localize genes having an impact on Johne's disease susceptibility using the latest bovine genome information and a high density SNP panel (Illumina BovineSNP50 BeadChip) to perform a case/control, genome-wide association analysis. Samples from MAP case and negative controls were selected from field samples collected in 2007 and 2008 in the province of Lombardy, Italy. Cases were defined as animals serologically positive for MAP by ELISA. In total 966 samples were genotyped: 483 MAP ELISA positive and 483 ELISA negative. Samples were selected randomly among those collected from 119 farms which had at least one positive animal. Conclusion/Significance: The analysis of the genotype data identified several chromosomal regions associated with disease status: a region on chromosome 12 with high significance (P<5×10-6), while regions on chromosome 9, 11, and 12 had moderate significance (P<5×10-5). These results provide evidence for genetic loci involved in the humoral response to MAP. Knowledge of genetic variations related to susceptibility will facilitate the incorporation of this information into breeding programmes for the improvement of health status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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11. Identification of differentially expressed proteins in Ficedula flycatchers.
- Author
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Buggiotti, Laura, Primmer, Craig R., Kouvonen, Petri, Bureš, Stanislav, Corthals, Garry L., and Leder, Erica H.
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- 2008
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12. Characterization of the first growth hormone gene sequence for a passerine bird - the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca).
- Author
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Buggiotti, Laura, Hellström, Micaela A., and Primmer, Craig R.
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SOMATOTROPIN , *PASSERIFORMES , *FLYCATCHERS , *MOLECULAR biology , *GENES - Abstract
While the growth hormone (GH) gene has been characterized in a broad range of vertebrates, surprisingly little is known about this gene in birds. In order to extend knowledge of the GH gene in avian species and non-domestic species, the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) GH gene has been sequenced in this study. The overall average pairwise sequence divergence level was 0.08 among all available avian sequences and 0.27 among other taxa. However, the overall genetic organization of the gene is quite conserved. The similarity of the GH gene sequence of pied flycatchers with those of chicken and duck suggests that the rapid bursts of molecular evolution observed in mammalian and fish GH have not occurred during the divergence of passerine and non-passerine birds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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13. Mining the Unmapped Reads in Bovine RNA-Seq Data Reveals the Prevalence of Bovine Herpes Virus-6 in European Dairy Cows and the Associated Changes in Their Phenotype and Leucocyte Transcriptome.
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Buggiotti, Laura, Cheng, Zhangrui, Wathes, D. Claire, and McCormick, Craig
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DAIRY cattle , *PHENOTYPES , *HERPESVIRUS diseases , *BOS , *UBIQUITIN ligases , *MASTITIS , *LEUCOCYTES , *ANIMAL herds - Abstract
Microbial RNA is detectable in host samples by aligning unmapped reads from RNA sequencing against taxon reference sequences, generating a score proportional to the microbial load. An RNA-Seq data analysis showed that 83.5% of leukocyte samples from six dairy herds in different EU countries contained bovine herpes virus-6 (BoHV-6). Phenotypic data on milk production, metabolic function, and disease collected during their first 50 days in milk (DIM) were compared between cows with low (1–200 and n = 114) or high (201–1175 and n = 24) BoHV-6 scores. There were no differences in milk production parameters, but high score cows had numerically fewer incidences of clinical mastitis (4.2% vs. 12.2%) and uterine disease (54.5% vs. 62.7%). Their metabolic status was worse, based on measurements of IGF-1 and various metabolites in blood and milk. A comparison of the global leukocyte transcriptome between high and low BoHV-6 score cows at around 14 DIM yielded 485 differentially expressed genes (DEGs). The top pathway from Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis was the immune system process. Down-regulated genes in the high BoHV-6 cows included those encoding proteins involved in viral detection (DDX6 and DDX58), interferon response, and E3 ubiquitin ligase activity. This suggested that BoHV-6 may largely evade viral detection and that it does not cause clinical disease in dairy cows. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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