Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T00:59:45.140Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) associated polymorphisms of the prion-like protein gene (PRND) in Korean dairy cattle and Hanwoo

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 February 2018

Yong-Chan Kim
Affiliation:
Korea Zoonosis Research Institute, Chonbuk National University, Iksan 570-390, Republic of Korea Department of Bioactive Material Sciences, Chonbuk National University, Jeonju 561-756, Republic of Korea
Byung-Hoon Jeong*
Affiliation:
Korea Zoonosis Research Institute, Chonbuk National University, Iksan 570-390, Republic of Korea Department of Bioactive Material Sciences, Chonbuk National University, Jeonju 561-756, Republic of Korea
*
*For correspondence; e-mail: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) involves insertion/deletion (in/del) polymorphisms in the prion protein gene (PRNP) promoter region that are associated with vulnerability to disease progression. Recently, a second member of the prion gene family, prion-like protein gene (PRND), has been reported to show the PRND R132Q polymorphism, which is associated with the susceptibility to BSE in German Fleckvieh breeds. The objective of this study was to examine the genotype, allele, and haplotype frequencies of PRND gene in Korean cattle and evaluate their susceptibility to BSE. We did this in 277 Korean native cattle (Hanwoo) and 124 Korean dairy cattle (Holstein) by direct sequencing and compared the R132Q genotype frequency between BSE-affected German cattle and Korean cattle. The results indicated a total of 5 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) including PRND c.149G > A (p.50Arg > His; R50H), PRND c.285C > T (C4819T), PRND c.395G > A (p.132Arg > Gln; R132Q) and PRND c.528T > A (T5063A) in the open reading frame (ORF) and c.602C > G in the 3′ untranslated region (UTR) of exon 2 in Korean Holstein and Hanwoo cattle. Except for c.149G > A, the remaining 4 SNPs showed significantly different genotype and allele frequencies between the Korean Holstein and Hanwoo (P < 0·01). There were no significant differences in genotype distribution of c.395G > A SNP between BSE-affected German and Korean Holstein cattle (P = 0·6778), but a significant difference was detected between BSE-affected German cattle and Hanwoo cattle (P = 0·0028). The results suggest that Hanwoo cattle may possess a relatively more BSE-resistant genotype than Korean Holstein cattle.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Hannah Dairy Research Foundation 2018 

Prion disease in cattle was called bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) and was first recognised in the United Kingdom in 1986 (Bradley et al. Reference Bradley, Collee and Liberski2006). BSE shares common features with Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (CJD) showing scrapie like spongiform vacuolation of brain tissue and accumulation of the scrapie form of prion protein, PrPSc (Wood et al. Reference Wood, McGill, Done and Bradley1997; Aguzzi & Heikenwalder, Reference Aguzzi and Heikenwalder2006). In humans and sheep, prion protein gene (PRNP) acts as a major genetic factor in prion diseases. Met/Met genotype of human PRNP codon 129 is susceptible to CJD in human, and haplotypes of ovine PRNP codons 136, 154 and 171 are significantly associated with susceptibility to scrapie in sheep (Hunter et al. Reference Hunter, Goldmann, Foster, Cairns and Smith1997; Jeong et al. Reference Jeong, Lee, Kim, Jin, Kim, Carp and Kim2005b; Groschup et al. Reference Groschup, Lacroux, Buschmann, Luhken, Mathey, Eiden, Lugan, Hoffmann, Espinosa, Baron, Torres, Erhardt and Andreoletti2007; Jeong & Kim, Reference Jeong and Kim2014). Similarly, BSE-affected cattle show higher distributions of 23 bp deletion in the PRNP promoter region and 12 bp deletion in the PRNP intron region than healthy cattle (Jeong et al. Reference Jeong, Lee, Kim, Carp and Kim2006; Haase et al. Reference Haase, Doherr, Seuberlich, Drogemuller, Dolf, Nicken, Schiebel, Ziegler, Groschup, Zurbriggen and Leeb2007). Recent studies suggested that single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) 4136 and 13 861 in the non-coding region of bovine PRNP gene are related to BSE susceptibility (Murdoch et al. Reference Murdoch, Clawson, Laegreid, Stothard, Settles, McKay, Prasad, Wang, Moore and Williams2010a, Reference Murdoch, Clawson, Yue, Basu, McKay, Settles, Capoferri, Laegreid, Williams and Mooreb; Jeong et al. Reference Jeong, Jin, Carp and Kim2013). However, the frequency of PRNP Met/Met genotype in Korean population is approximately three times higher than that in British population, but the incidence of sporadic CJD is somewhat similar (Brandel et al. Reference Brandel, Preece, Brown, Croes, Laplanche, Agid, Will and Alperovitch2003; Nurmi et al. Reference Nurmi, Bishop, Strain, Brett, McGuigan, Hutchison, Farrell, Tilvis, Erkkila, Simell, Knight and Haltia2003; Jeong et al. Reference Jeong, Lee, Kim, Jin, Kim, Carp and Kim2005b; Jeong & Kim, Reference Jeong and Kim2014). In addition, the same PRNP gene transgenic mouse has different disease incubation times (Lloyd et al. Reference Lloyd, Onwuazor, Beck, Mallinson, Farrall, Targonski, Collinge and Fisher2001), indicating that other factors besides the PRNP gene may contribute to the progression of prion diseases.

In recent studies, human prion diseases showed association with prion-like protein gene (PRND) polymorphisms. Among several polymorphisms, T174M polymorphism in the coding region and polymorphisms at the 3′ untranslated region (UTR) are significantly related to human prion diseases (Mead et al. Reference Mead, Beck, Dickinson, Fisher and Collinge2000; Peoc'h et al. Reference Peoc'h, Guerin, Brandel, Launay and Laplanche2000; Croes et al. Reference Croes, Alizadeh, Bertoli-Avella, Rademaker, Vergeer-Drop, Dermaut, Houwing-Duistermaat, Wientjens, Hofman, Van Broeckhoven and van Duijn2004; Jeong et al. Reference Jeong, Kim, Choi, Lee, Song, Kim, Carp and Kim2005a). In addition, codon 26 of PRND gene is related with susceptibility to scrapie in sheep (Mesquita et al. Reference Mesquita, Batista, Marques, Santos, Pimenta, Silva Pereira, Carolino, Santos Silva, Oliveira Sousa, Gama, Fontes, Horta, Prates and Pereira2010). Two studies in cattle have identified relationships between BSE and PRND genotype. The PRND genotype differs significantly between healthy cattle and BSE cattle of the Fleckvieh breed in Germany (Balbus et al. Reference Balbus, Humeny, Kashkevich, Henz, Fischer, Becker and Schiebel2005). UK cattle also showed different haplotype distribution between healthy cattle and BSE cattle (Comincini et al. Reference Comincini, Foti, Tranulis, Hills, Di Guardo, Vaccari, Williams, Harbitz and Ferretti2001).

The purpose of this study was to assess the susceptibility of Korean native cattle (Hanwoo) and Korean dairy cattle (Holstein) to BSE. Thus, we investigated the PRND genotype, allele and haplotype frequencies of SNPs in 124 Korean Holstein and 277 Hanwoo and compared the distribution of PRND genotype between Korean cattle and BSE cattle from the previous study.

Material and methods

Genetic analysis

Peripheral blood samples from 277 Hanwoo and 124 Holstein cattle in South Korea were obtained in ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) tubes. Genomic DNA was extracted from 200 µl peripheral blood sample using DNA blood mini kit (Qiagen, USA) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was carried out with the following forward and reverse primers: Bovine PRND-F (GAGACTCAGAACTCCACTGA) and Bovine PRND-R (TGCTCTTTGGTACCTTCAGA). The genomic DNA sequence of PRND gene was obtained from GenBank (Gene ID: 281426) and PCR primers were designed to amplify the open reading frame (ORF) of the gene. Each reaction mixture contained 50 pmole of each primer, 5 µl of 10 × Taq DNA polymerase buffer, 1 µl of 10 mm dNTP mixture, 2·5 units of Taq DNA polymerase (Promega, USA) and nuclease-free water to a total volume of 25 µl. The PCR cycling parameters were as follows: denaturing at 95 °C for 2 min, followed by 35 cycles of 95 °C for 20 s, 59 °C for 40 s, and 72 °C for 2 min, and then 1 cycle of 72 °C for 10 min for final extension using an S-1000 Thermal Cycler (Bio-Rad Laboratories, USA). The PCR products for automatic DNA sequencing were prepared using a gel extraction kit (Qiagen, USA). Purified PCR products were directly sequenced with an ABI 3730 Capillary Sequencer (ABI, USA).

Statistical analysis

All statistical analyses were calculated using Statistical Analysis Software version 9.3 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC, USA). We also examined Lewontin's D′ (|D′|) between five SNPs of PRND gene in Hanwoo and Holstein cattle. Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium (HWE) test and haplotype analysis were performed using SNP Analyser TM 2.0 (http://snp.istech.info/istech/board/ detail_snpa2.jsp). The susceptibility to BSE was compared across genotype using the Chi-square test. P value < 0·05 was considered as statistically significant.

Results

The bovine PRND gene is composed of two exons. To examine the genotype and allele frequencies of PRND SNPs in Korean Holstein and Hanwoo cattle, we investigated SNPs within exon 2 including ORF of bovine PRND gene by direct sequencing of the genomic DNA of 277 Hanwoo and 124 Holstein cattle. A total of five SNPs were detected including PRND 149G > A (p.50Arg > His; R50H), PRND c.285C > T (C4819T), PRND c.395G > A (p.132Arg > Gln; R132Q) and PRND c.528T > A (T5063A) in the ORF and c.602C > G in the 3′ UTR of exon 2. The differences of genotype and allele frequencies of the five PRND polymorphisms are described in Table 1. The genotype frequencies of all five SNPs followed HWE in the Hanwoo. In the Korean Holstein, two SNPs, c.285C > T and c.528T > A were not in HWE (P = 0·033), the other three SNPs were in HWE.

Table 1. Genotype and allele frequencies of PRND polymorphisms in Korean Hanwoo and Holstein cattle

To evaluate the susceptibility to BSE in Korean Holstein and Hanwoo cattle, we compared the genotype frequency of PRND c.395G > A (p.132 Arg > Gln; R132Q) polymorphism between BSE-affected German cattle (data from Balbus et al. Reference Balbus, Humeny, Kashkevich, Henz, Fischer, Becker and Schiebel2005, used with permission: online Supplementary File) and Korean cattle (Fig. 1). A significant difference in genotype distribution of c.395G > A SNP was previously shown between BSE-affected and healthy German Fleckvieh cattle (Balbus et al. Reference Balbus, Humeny, Kashkevich, Henz, Fischer, Becker and Schiebel2005). However, there were no significant differences in genotype distribution of this SNP between BSE-affected German cattle and Korean Holstein cattle (P = 0·6778). A significant difference in genotype distribution was detected between BSE-German cattle and Hanwoo cattle (P = 0·0028).

Fig. 1. Genotype comparison of c.395G > A (p.132 Arg > Gln; R132Q) polymorphism of prion-like protein gene (PRND) in BSE-affected German cattle† and Korean cattle. GR FV BSE: BSE-affected German Fleckvieh cattle; GR FV Healthy: Healthy German Fleckvieh cattle; KR HW Healthy: Healthy Korean native cattle (Hanwoo); KR HL Healthy: Healthy Korean dairy cattle (Holstein). Parentheses indicate the sample numbers of cattle. Asterisks indicate statistically significant differences of genotype distribution between BSE-affected cattle and Healthy cattle. **P < 0·001. †Data from Balbus et al. (Reference Balbus, Humeny, Kashkevich, Henz, Fischer, Becker and Schiebel2005), used with permission: online Supplementary File.

To examine whether there was a strong linkage disequilibrium (LD) among the five SNPs, LD coefficient (|D′|) was calculated in the SNPs of Korean Holstein and Hanwoo cattle. The results indicated a weak LD for c.149G > A with c.285C > T, c.395G > A, c.528T > A and c.602C > G. The remaining 4 SNPs showed a strong LD with D′ value 0·970–1·0 (Table 2).

Table 2. Linkage Disequilibrium (LD) among five single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of PRND gene in Korean Hanwoo and Holstein cattle

Analysis of haplotype frequency was carried out for Korean Holstein and Hanwoo cattle. As shown in Table 3, among the six haplotypes, GCATG haplotype was observed more frequently (51·2% for the Hanwoo; 70·7% for the Korean Holstein). The haplotype frequencies of GCATG, GTGAC, GCGTC, ATGAC and ACATG revealed substantial differences between Korean Holstein and Hanwoo cattle.

Table 3. Haplotype frequency of five PRND polymorphisms in Korean Hanwoo and Holstein cattle

Others contain rare haplotypes with frequency <0·001.

Discussion

PRNP is considered a major genetic factor of several prion diseases including scrapie, CJD and BSE. A significant difference in insertion/deletion (in/del) genotype frequencies of bovine PRNP gene has been found in the promoter and intron regions between BSE-affected cattle and healthy cattle. These two polymorphisms are associated with transcription factor binding site of RP58 and SP1; in addition, follow-up studies confirm that the polymorphisms are related to the expression level of cellular prion protein (PrPC). Since prion expression level is associated with the incubation period of disease onset, it is concluded that these two polymorphisms are associated with BSE progression (Sander et al. Reference Sander, Hamann, Drogemuller, Kashkevich, Schiebel and Leeb2005). In addition, a previous study identified the PRNP ORF mutation, E211K, which is potentially associated with the familial form of BSE (Nicholson et al. Reference Nicholson, Brunelle, Richt, Kehrli and Greenlee2008). This mutation, located in codon 211 of the bovine PRNP gene, is in a region homologous with codon 200 of human PRNP. Since the major form of familial CJD is caused by the E200K mutation (Jeong & Kim, Reference Jeong and Kim2014; Cohen et al. Reference Cohen, Chapman, Korczyn, Nitsan, Appel, Hoffmann, Rosenmann, Kahana and Lee2015), E211K mutation in cattle can act as the genetic factor of the putative inherited form of BSE. Several attempts to identify this mutation in the germline have been unsuccessful thus far (Heaton et al. Reference Heaton, Keele, Harhay, Richt, Koohmaraie, Wheeler, Shackelford, Casas, King, Sonstegard, Van Tassell, Neibergs, Chase, Kalbfleisch, Smith, Clawson and Laegreid2008; Zhao et al. Reference Zhao, Wang, Zou and Zhang2010; Kim & Jeong, Reference Kim and Jeong2017).

Recent studies have focused on the PRND gene, paralogue of PRNP. PRND is located 25·9 kb downstream of PRNP and encodes the prion-like protein, doppel. Doppel, an N-terminal truncated form of the PrPC is composed of 178 amino acids (Golaniska et al. Reference Golaniska, Flirski and Liberski2004). Because of biochemical and structural similarity with PRNP, several PRND SNPs were investigated and analysed for association with BSE. Comincini and Balbus conducted a BSE case-control study on the PRND gene in British and German cattle. In British Friesian cattle, the R50H N110N R132R genotype frequency was different between BSE-affected cattle and healthy cattle (Comincini et al. Reference Comincini, Foti, Tranulis, Hills, Di Guardo, Vaccari, Williams, Harbitz and Ferretti2001). In German Fleckvieh cattle, the distribution of genotype C4815T and R132Q was significantly different between BSE-affected cattle and healthy cattle (Balbus et al. Reference Balbus, Humeny, Kashkevich, Henz, Fischer, Becker and Schiebel2005). Among several PRND polymorphisms, we are interested in the nonsynonymous polymorphism, R132Q, since this polymorphism can cause conformational change of the peptide and shows statistically significant association with BSE. We tried to evaluate the susceptibility to BSE in Korean Holstein and Hanwoo cattle by comparing the genotype distribution of R132Q. Hanwoo cattle showed statistically different genotype distribution as compared to BSE-affected cattle (P < 0·05), whereas Korean Holstein cattle showed similar genotype distribution with BSE-affected cattle (P > 0·05) (Fig. 1). This implies that the Hanwoo possesses a relatively more BSE-resistant genotype than the Korean Holstein. Our previous study on the PRNP gene showed that the resistant allele distribution of 23 bp in/del polymorphism of the promoter region in Hanwoo cattle was higher than that in Korean Holstein cattle (Jeong et al. Reference Jeong, Lee, Kim, Carp and Kim2006). These results suggested that the Hanwoo possess more resistant genotypes in two major members of the prion gene family, PRNP and PRND. However, the SNP studies did not show the identical results in cattle of all breeds, and was performed in relatively limited sample groups. Therefore, these SNPs should be assessed in a large BSE-affected group and various cattle breeds in the future.

PRND polymorphisms showed a propensity toward susceptibility to various types of prion diseases in several species (Comincini et al. Reference Comincini, Foti, Tranulis, Hills, Di Guardo, Vaccari, Williams, Harbitz and Ferretti2001; Croes et al. Reference Croes, Alizadeh, Bertoli-Avella, Rademaker, Vergeer-Drop, Dermaut, Houwing-Duistermaat, Wientjens, Hofman, Van Broeckhoven and van Duijn2004; Balbus et al. Reference Balbus, Humeny, Kashkevich, Henz, Fischer, Becker and Schiebel2005; Jeong et al. Reference Jeong, Kim, Choi, Lee, Song, Kim, Carp and Kim2005a; Mesquita et al. Reference Mesquita, Batista, Marques, Santos, Pimenta, Silva Pereira, Carolino, Santos Silva, Oliveira Sousa, Gama, Fontes, Horta, Prates and Pereira2010). In addition, doppel was localised in the dystrophic neurites of senile plaques in Alzheimer's disease (AD) (Ferrer et al. Reference Ferrer, Freixas, Blanco, Carmona and Puig2004), and PRND polymorphism at the 3′ UTR was associated with several phenotypes such as increased cumulative behavioural load and an elevated risk for delusions, anxiety, agitation/aggression, apathy and irritability/emotional ability in AD patients (Flirski et al. Reference Flirski, Sieruta, Golanska, Kloszewska, Liberski and Sobow2012). Moreover, the ectopic expression of doppel was toxic in neuronal cells but not in spermatogenic cells (Qin et al. Reference Qin, Ding, Xiao, Ma, Wang, Gao and Zhao2013). Thus, further investigation on the association between doppel and neurodegenerative diseases is needed in the future.

In conclusion, the analysis of the bovine PRND polymorphisms in Korean cattle revealed that the genotype frequency of PRND c.395G > A (p.132 Arg > Gln; R132Q) in Hanwoo was significantly different from that in Korean Holstein and from that previously reported in BSE-affected German cattle. It suggests that Hanwoo have a genotype that is relatively resistant to BSE. Our data will help to predict the BSE susceptibility based on the SNP of the bovine PRND gene in Korean cattle.

Supplementary material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022029917000814.

This research was supported by the Basic Science Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (2015R1D1A1A010599). This research was also supported by Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Education (2017R1A6A1A03015876). Mr. Y.-C. Kim was supported by the BK21 Plus program in the Department of Bioactive Material Sciences.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest.

References

Aguzzi, A & Heikenwalder, M 2006 Pathogenesis of prion diseases: current status and future outlook. Nature Reviews Microbiology 4 765775 Google Scholar
Balbus, N, Humeny, A, Kashkevich, K, Henz, I, Fischer, C, Becker, CM & Schiebel, K 2005 DNA polymorphisms of the prion doppel gene region in four different German cattle breeds and cows tested positive for bovine spongiform encephalopathy. Mammalian Genome 16 884892 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bradley, R, Collee, JG & Liberski, PP 2006 Variant CJD (vCJD) and bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE): 10 and 20 years on: part 1. Folia Neuropathologica 44 93101 Google Scholar
Brandel, JP, Preece, M, Brown, P, Croes, E, Laplanche, JL, Agid, Y, Will, R & Alperovitch, A 2003 Distribution of codon 129 genotype in human growth hormone-treated CJD patients in France and the UK. Lancet 362 128130 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cohen, OS, Chapman, J, Korczyn, AD, Nitsan, Z, Appel, S, Hoffmann, C, Rosenmann, H, Kahana, E & Lee, H 2015 Familial Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease with the E200K mutation: longitudinal neuroimaging from asymptomatic to symptomatic CJD. Journal of Neurology 262 604613 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Comincini, S, Foti, MG, Tranulis, MA, Hills, D, Di Guardo, G, Vaccari, G, Williams, JL, Harbitz, I & Ferretti, L 2001 Genomic organization, comparative analysis, and genetic polymorphisms of the bovine and ovine prion Doppel genes (PRND). Mammalian Genome 12 729733 Google Scholar
Croes, EA, Alizadeh, BZ, Bertoli-Avella, AM, Rademaker, T, Vergeer-Drop, J, Dermaut, B, Houwing-Duistermaat, JJ, Wientjens, DP, Hofman, A, Van Broeckhoven, C & van Duijn, CM 2004 Polymorphisms in the prion protein gene and in the doppel gene increase susceptibility for Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. European Journal of Human Genetics 12 389394 Google Scholar
Ferrer, I, Freixas, M, Blanco, R, Carmona, M & Puig, B 2004 Selective PrP-like protein, doppel immunoreactivity in dystrophic neurites of senile plaques in Alzheimer's disease. Neuropathology and Applied Neurobiology 30 329337 Google Scholar
Flirski, M, Sieruta, M, Golanska, E, Kloszewska, I, Liberski, PP & Sobow, T 2012 PRND 3′UTR polymorphism may be associated with behavioral disturbances in Alzheimer disease. Prion 6 7380 Google Scholar
Golaniska, E, Flirski, M & Liberski, PP 2004 Doppel: the prion's double. Folia Neuropathologica 42(Suppl. A) 4754 Google Scholar
Groschup, MH, Lacroux, C, Buschmann, A, Luhken, G, Mathey, J, Eiden, M, Lugan, S, Hoffmann, C, Espinosa, JC, Baron, T, Torres, JM, Erhardt, G & Andreoletti, O 2007 Classic scrapie in sheep with the ARR/ARR prion genotype in Germany and France. Emerging Infectious Diseases 13 12011207 Google Scholar
Haase, B, Doherr, MG, Seuberlich, T, Drogemuller, C, Dolf, G, Nicken, P, Schiebel, K, Ziegler, U, Groschup, MH, Zurbriggen, A & Leeb, T 2007 PRNP promoter polymorphisms are associated with BSE susceptibility in Swiss and German cattle. BMC Genetics 8 15 Google Scholar
Heaton, MP, Keele, JW, Harhay, GP, Richt, JA, Koohmaraie, M, Wheeler, TL, Shackelford, SD, Casas, E, King, DA, Sonstegard, TS, Van Tassell, CP, Neibergs, HL, Chase, CC Jr, Kalbfleisch, TS, Smith, TP, Clawson, ML & Laegreid, WW 2008 Prevalence of the prion protein gene E211K variant in U.S. cattle. BMC Veterinary Research 4 25 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hunter, N, Goldmann, W, Foster, JD, Cairns, D & Smith, G 1997 Natural scrapie and PrP genotype: case-control studies in British sheep. The Veterinary Record 141 137140 Google Scholar
Jeong, BH & Kim, YS 2014 Genetic studies in human prion diseases. Journal of Korean Medical Science 29 623632 Google Scholar
Jeong, BH, Kim, NH, Choi, EK, Lee, C, Song, YH, Kim, JI, Carp, RI & Kim, YS 2005a Polymorphism at 3′ UTR +28 of the prion-like protein gene is associated with sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. European Journal of Human Genetics 13 10941097 Google Scholar
Jeong, BH, Lee, KH, Kim, NH, Jin, JK, Kim, JI, Carp, RI & Kim, YS 2005b Association of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease with homozygous genotypes at PRNP codons 129 and 219 in the Korean population. Neurogenetics 6 229232 Google Scholar
Jeong, BH, Lee, YJ, Kim, NH, Carp, RI & Kim, YS 2006 Genotype distribution of the prion protein gene (PRNP) promoter polymorphisms in Korean cattle. Genome 49 15391544 Google Scholar
Jeong, BH, Jin, HT, Carp, RI & Kim, YS 2013 Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE)-associated polymorphisms of the prion protein (PRNP) gene in Korean native cattle. Animal Genetics 44 356357 Google Scholar
Kim, YC & Jeong, BH 2017 Lack of germline mutation at codon 211 of the prion protein gene (PRNP) in Korean native cattle. Acta Veterinaria Hungarica 65 147152 Google Scholar
Lloyd, SE, Onwuazor, ON, Beck, JA, Mallinson, G, Farrall, M, Targonski, P, Collinge, J & Fisher, EM 2001 Identification of multiple quantitative trait loci linked to prion disease incubation period in mice. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 98 62796283 Google Scholar
Mead, S, Beck, J, Dickinson, A, Fisher, EM & Collinge, J 2000 Examination of the human prion protein-like gene doppel for genetic susceptibility to sporadic and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. Neuroscience Letters 290 117120 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mesquita, P, Batista, M, Marques, MR, Santos, IC, Pimenta, J, Silva Pereira, M, Carolino, I, Santos Silva, F, Oliveira Sousa, MC, Gama, LT, Fontes, CM, Horta, AE, Prates, JA & Pereira, RM 2010 Prion-like Doppel gene polymorphisms and scrapie susceptibility in Portuguese sheep breeds. Animal Genetics 41 311314 Google Scholar
Murdoch, BM, Clawson, ML, Laegreid, WW, Stothard, P, Settles, M, McKay, S, Prasad, A, Wang, Z, Moore, SS & Williams, JL 2010a A 2cM genome-wide scan of European Holstein cattle affected by classical BSE. BMC Genetics 11 20 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Murdoch, BM, Clawson, ML, Yue, S, Basu, U, McKay, S, Settles, M, Capoferri, R, Laegreid, WW, Williams, JL & Moore, SS 2010b PRNP haplotype associated with classical BSE incidence in European Holstein cattle. PLoS ONE 5 e12786 Google Scholar
Nicholson, EM, Brunelle, BW, Richt, JA, Kehrli, ME Jr & Greenlee, JJ 2008 Identification of a heritable polymorphism in bovine PRNP associated with genetic transmissible spongiform encephalopathy: evidence of heritable BSE. PLoS ONE 3 e2912 Google Scholar
Nurmi, MH, Bishop, M, Strain, L, Brett, F, McGuigan, C, Hutchison, M, Farrell, M, Tilvis, R, Erkkila, S, Simell, O, Knight, R & Haltia, M 2003 The normal population distribution of PRNP codon 129 polymorphism. Acta Neurologica Scandinavica 108 374378 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Peoc'h, K, Guerin, C, Brandel, JP, Launay, JM & Laplanche, JL 2000 First report of polymorphisms in the prion-like protein gene (PRND): implications for human prion diseases. Neuroscience Letters 286 144148 Google Scholar
Qin, K, Ding, T, Xiao, Y, Ma, W, Wang, Z, Gao, J & Zhao, L 2013 Differential responses of neuronal and spermatogenic cells to the doppel cytotoxicity. PLoS ONE 8 e82130 Google Scholar
Sander, P, Hamann, H, Drogemuller, C, Kashkevich, K, Schiebel, K & Leeb, T 2005 Bovine prion protein gene (PRNP) promoter polymorphisms modulate PRNP expression and may be responsible for differences in bovine spongiform encephalopathy susceptibility. The Journal of Biological Chemistry 280 3740837414 Google Scholar
Wood, JL, McGill, IS, Done, SH & Bradley, R 1997 Neuropathology of scrapie: a study of the distribution patterns of brain lesions in 222 cases of natural scrapie in sheep, 1982–1991. The Veterinary Record 140 167174 Google Scholar
Zhao, H, Wang, XY, Zou, W & Zhang, YP 2010 Prion protein gene (PRNP) polymorphisms in native Chinese cattle. Genome 53 138145 Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Genotype and allele frequencies of PRND polymorphisms in Korean Hanwoo and Holstein cattle

Figure 1

Fig. 1. Genotype comparison of c.395G > A (p.132 Arg > Gln; R132Q) polymorphism of prion-like protein gene (PRND) in BSE-affected German cattle† and Korean cattle. GR FV BSE: BSE-affected German Fleckvieh cattle; GR FV Healthy: Healthy German Fleckvieh cattle; KR HW Healthy: Healthy Korean native cattle (Hanwoo); KR HL Healthy: Healthy Korean dairy cattle (Holstein). Parentheses indicate the sample numbers of cattle. Asterisks indicate statistically significant differences of genotype distribution between BSE-affected cattle and Healthy cattle. **P < 0·001. †Data from Balbus et al. (2005), used with permission: online Supplementary File.

Figure 2

Table 2. Linkage Disequilibrium (LD) among five single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of PRND gene in Korean Hanwoo and Holstein cattle

Figure 3

Table 3. Haplotype frequency of five PRND polymorphisms in Korean Hanwoo and Holstein cattle

Supplementary material: PDF

Kim and Jeong supplementary material

Kim and Jeong supplementary material 1

Download Kim and Jeong supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 71.5 KB