Dear all,


My colleagues and I are pleased to announce the publication of the following 
paper:


Batley KC, Sandoval‐Castillo J, Kemper CM, Attard, CRM, Zanardo, N, Tomo, I, 
Beheregaray, LB, Möller, LM (2018). Genome-wide association study of an unusual 
dolphin mortality event reveals candidate genes for susceptibility and 
resistance to cetacean morbillivirus. Evolutionary Applications. 
https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.12747



Abstract:
Infectious diseases are significant demographic and evolutionary drivers of 
populations, but studies about the genetic basis of disease resistance and 
susceptibility are scarce in wildlife populations. Cetacean morbillivirus 
(CeMV) is a highly contagious disease that is increasing in both geographic 
distribution and incidence, causing unusual mortality events (UME) and killing 
tens of thousands of individuals across multiple cetacean species worldwide 
since the late 1980’s. The largest CeMV outbreak in the Southern Hemisphere 
reported to date occurred in Australia in 2013, where it was a major factor in 
a UME, killing mainly young Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops 
aduncus). Using cases (non-survivors) and controls (putative survivors) from 
the most affected population, we carried out a genome-wide association study to 
identify candidate genes for resistance and susceptibility to CeMV. The genomic 
dataset consisted of 278,147,988 sequence reads and 35,493 high quality SNPs 
genotyped across 38 individuals. Association analyses found highly significant 
differences in allele and genotype frequencies amongst cases and controls at 65 
SNPs, and Random Forests conservatively identified eight as candidates. 
Annotation of these SNPs identified five candidate genes (MAPK8, FBXW11, INADL, 
ANK3, and ACOX3) with functions associated with stress, pain and immune 
responses. Our findings provide the first insights into the genetic basis of 
host defence to this highly contagious disease, enabling the development of an 
applied evolutionary framework to monitor CeMV resistance across cetacean 
species. Biomarkers could now be established to assess potential risk factors 
associated with these genes in other CeMV affected cetacean populations and 
species. These results could also possibly aid in the advancement of vaccines 
against morbilliviruses.



The PDF is freely accessible at https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.12747



Regards,



Kimberley Batley, on behalf of all co-authors

Kimberley Batley
PhD candidate

Cetacean Ecology, Behaviour and Evolution Lab (CEBEL)
Molecular Ecology Lab (MELFU)
College of Science & Engineering, Flinders University
P  +61 8  8201 3865    | E [email protected]
www.cebel.org.au<http://www.cebel.org.au/>   | 
www.molecularecology.flinders.edu.au<http://www.molecularecology.flinders.edu.au/>

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