Swine

Genomic Differences between Preweaning Survival and Mortality of Piglets Following PEDV Outbreaks

Authors
  • Francesca Bertolini (Iowa State University)
  • John C. S. Harding (University of Saskatchewan)
  • Benny E. Mote (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)
  • Graham S. Plastow (University of Alberta)
  • Max F. Rothschild (Iowa State University)

Abstract

Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea (PED) is a serious and potentially devastating disease in the US and Canadian pig industries. To investigate if there is genetic resistance to PEDV a total of 156 dead and 106 surviving neonatal piglets infected with PEDV were genotyped with over 60,000 genetic markers to investigate genetic differences between the two groups. This allows for the identification of genomic regions that could be linked to susceptibility/resistance to virus infection and in cellular components that are involved in the PED virus infection cycle, providing new insights on the genetic resistance to this disease.

How to Cite:

Bertolini, F., Harding, J. C., Mote, B. E., Plastow, G. S. & Rothschild, M. F., (2016) “Genomic Differences between Preweaning Survival and Mortality of Piglets Following PEDV Outbreaks”, Iowa State University Animal Industry Report 13(1). doi: https://doi.org/10.31274/ans_air-180814-239

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Published on
01 Jan 2016
Peer Reviewed