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Unraveling Resistance and Susceptibility to Johne’s Disease

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Project Overview

Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP) causes Johne’s disease, which is responsible for substantial economic losses in the dairy industry. This research investigated the host genetic and epigenetic variations associated with susceptibility and tolerance to Johne's disease. They also examined the diversity of MAP genetics and the host-pathogen dynamics responsible for disease progression in cows infected with MAP.

What Did the Research Team Do?

Collected samples from 3,300 cows from 22 dairy herds in the provinces of Ontario and Quebec and identified inter-herd transmission patterns using whole-genome-sequencing as an epidemiological tool to validate cow movement as the cause of inter-herd disease transmission.
 
Collected samples from 67 cows in these 22 herds to look at the variability of MAP strains.
 
Within four dairy herds, further investigated 14 cows shedding MAP to identify if multiple MAP strains were infecting a single infected animal and if microevolution of MAP was occurring.
 
Developed a multiplex-PCR test for Johne’s disease with greater sensitivity than the currently available commercial kits.

What Did the Research Team Find?

  • Identification of genetic markers associated with the susceptibility of developing Johne’s disease.
  • Epigenetic variations associated with susceptibility of Johne's disease.
  • Cows can be infected with multiple strains of MAP and the strain of MAP can evolve within the cow.
  • MAP strains differ substantially between farms. This variability may explain differences in the severity of Johne’s disease that may be present on farms.
  • This information can be used to explain differences observed between the spread of MAP and clinical signs associated with a MAP infection, such as long-lasting diarrhea, progressive weight loss, decreased milk production, and increased culling and mortality.
  • Evaluated the efficacy of a new quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) technology used for detecting MAP infection.

**Scroll down for project communication outputs**

Principal Investigators

Nathalie Bissonnette
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada  (Sherbrooke)
 
Kapil Tahlan

Memorial University of Newfoundland

Co-Investigators

David Kelton
University of Guelph

Flavio Schenkel
University of Guelph

Eveline Ibeagha-Awemu
AAFC-Sherbrooke

Gilles Fecteau
Université de Montréal

Franck Biet
Institut national de la recherche agronomique - France

Key Words

  • Johne’s disease, microevolution, genomic epidemiology, epigenetic variation

Period: 2019-2023
Budget: $1,019,988

Last Updated: January 11, 2024

Funding Partners

PROJECT COMMUNICATION OUTPUTS

Investigating different strains of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis causing Johne’s disease in Canadian dairy cattle

INFOGRAPHIC

Investigating different strains of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis causing Johne’s disease in Canadian dairy cattle

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PROJECT PUBLICATIONS

  • Ibeagha-Awemu, E.M., N. Bissonnette, S. Bhattarai, M. Wang, P.-L. Dudemaine, S. McKay, X. Zhao. 2021. Whole Genome Methylation Analysis Reveals Role of DNA Methylation in Cow's Ileal and Ileal Lymph Node Responses to Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis Infection. Front. Genet. 12: 797490. https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2021.797490