A Consideration of Resistance and Tolerance for Ruminant Nematode Infections

Debates on the relative merits of resistance (the ability of the host to control the parasite lifecycle) and tolerance (the net impact of infection on host performance) are often lively and unhindered by data or evidence. Resistance generally shows continuous, heritable variation but data are sparse...

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Main Author: Steve eBishop
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2012-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Genetics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fgene.2012.00168/full
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spelling doaj-b4f86057db4f4afd8b79af70abd1df272020-11-24T22:31:30ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Genetics1664-80212012-12-01310.3389/fgene.2012.0016831944A Consideration of Resistance and Tolerance for Ruminant Nematode InfectionsSteve eBishop0The Roslin Institute, University of EdinburghDebates on the relative merits of resistance (the ability of the host to control the parasite lifecycle) and tolerance (the net impact of infection on host performance) are often lively and unhindered by data or evidence. Resistance generally shows continuous, heritable variation but data are sparser for tolerance, the utility of which will depend upon the disease prevalence. Prevalence is a function of group mean resistance and infection pressure, which itself is influenced by mean resistance. Tolerance will have most value for endemic diseases with a high prevalence, but will be of little value for low prevalence diseases. The conditionality of tolerance on infection status, and hence resistance, makes it difficult to estimate independently of resistance.Tolerance is potentially tractable for nematode infections, as the prevalence of infection is ca. 100% in animals grazing infected pasture, and infection level can be quantified by faecal egg count (FEC). Whilst individual animal phenotypes for tolerance are difficult to estimate, breeding values are estimable if related animals graze pastures of different contamination levels. Selection for resistance, i.e. FEC, provides both direct and indirect benefits from ever decreased pasture contamination and hence decreased infectious challenge. Modelling and experimental studies have shown that such reductions in pasture contamination may lead to substantially increased performance.It is proposed that selection goals addressing nematode infections should include both resistance and performance under challenging conditions. However, there may be benefits from exploiting large datasets in which sires are used across cohorts differing in infection level, to further explore tolerance. This may help to customise breeding objectives, with tolerance given greater weight in heavily parasitized environments.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fgene.2012.00168/fullEpidemiologySheepanimal geneticsresilienceworms
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Steve eBishop
spellingShingle Steve eBishop
A Consideration of Resistance and Tolerance for Ruminant Nematode Infections
Frontiers in Genetics
Epidemiology
Sheep
animal genetics
resilience
worms
author_facet Steve eBishop
author_sort Steve eBishop
title A Consideration of Resistance and Tolerance for Ruminant Nematode Infections
title_short A Consideration of Resistance and Tolerance for Ruminant Nematode Infections
title_full A Consideration of Resistance and Tolerance for Ruminant Nematode Infections
title_fullStr A Consideration of Resistance and Tolerance for Ruminant Nematode Infections
title_full_unstemmed A Consideration of Resistance and Tolerance for Ruminant Nematode Infections
title_sort consideration of resistance and tolerance for ruminant nematode infections
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Genetics
issn 1664-8021
publishDate 2012-12-01
description Debates on the relative merits of resistance (the ability of the host to control the parasite lifecycle) and tolerance (the net impact of infection on host performance) are often lively and unhindered by data or evidence. Resistance generally shows continuous, heritable variation but data are sparser for tolerance, the utility of which will depend upon the disease prevalence. Prevalence is a function of group mean resistance and infection pressure, which itself is influenced by mean resistance. Tolerance will have most value for endemic diseases with a high prevalence, but will be of little value for low prevalence diseases. The conditionality of tolerance on infection status, and hence resistance, makes it difficult to estimate independently of resistance.Tolerance is potentially tractable for nematode infections, as the prevalence of infection is ca. 100% in animals grazing infected pasture, and infection level can be quantified by faecal egg count (FEC). Whilst individual animal phenotypes for tolerance are difficult to estimate, breeding values are estimable if related animals graze pastures of different contamination levels. Selection for resistance, i.e. FEC, provides both direct and indirect benefits from ever decreased pasture contamination and hence decreased infectious challenge. Modelling and experimental studies have shown that such reductions in pasture contamination may lead to substantially increased performance.It is proposed that selection goals addressing nematode infections should include both resistance and performance under challenging conditions. However, there may be benefits from exploiting large datasets in which sires are used across cohorts differing in infection level, to further explore tolerance. This may help to customise breeding objectives, with tolerance given greater weight in heavily parasitized environments.
topic Epidemiology
Sheep
animal genetics
resilience
worms
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fgene.2012.00168/full
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