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Combinatorial Discriminant Analysis Applied to RNAseq Data Reveals a Set of 10 Transcripts as Signatures of Exposure of Cattle to Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis

Authors :
Maria Grazia De Iorio
Fiorentina Palazzo
Silvia Vitali
Daniel Remondini
Giulietta Minozzi
Gustavo Gandini
Michele Polli
John L. Williams
M. Malvisi
Nico Curti
Malvisi, Michela
Curti, Nico
Remondini, Daniel
De Iorio, Maria Grazia
Palazzo, Fiorentina
Gandini, Gustavo
Vitali, Silvia
Polli, Michele
Williams, John L
Minozzi, Giulietta
Source :
Animals, Vol 10, Iss 2, p 253 (2020), Animals, Volume 10, Issue 2, Animals : an Open Access Journal from MDPI
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

Paratuberculosis or Johne&rsquo<br />s disease in cattle is a chronic granulomatous gastroenteritis caused by infection with Mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis (MAP). Paratuberculosis is not treatable<br />therefore, the early identification and isolation of infected animals is a key point to reduce its incidence. In this paper, we analyse RNAseq experimental data of 5 ELISA-negative cattle exposed to MAP in a positive herd, compared to 5 negative-unexposed controls. The purpose was to find a small set of differentially expressed genes able to discriminate between exposed animals in a preclinical phase from non-exposed controls. Our results identified 10 transcripts that differentiate between ELISA-negative, clinically healthy, and exposed animals belonging to paratuberculosis-positive herds and negative-unexposed animals. Of the 10 transcripts, five (TRPV4, RIC8B, IL5RA, ERF, CDC40) showed significant differential expression between the three groups while the remaining 5 (RDM1, EPHX1, STAU1, TLE1, ASB8) did not show a significant difference in at least one of the pairwise comparisons. When tested in a larger cohort, these findings may contribute to the development of a new diagnostic test for paratuberculosis based on a gene expression signature. Such a diagnostic tool could allow early interventions to reduce the risk of the infection spreading.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20762615
Volume :
10
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Animals
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6f4b7b5ea19dbc35a39d5bf22c4de10d