The Scotsman

Genetic profiling project to boost resistance in cattle

● Bid to breed herds with more resistance to TB

- By EMILY BEAMENT

Scientists are undertakin­g genetic profiling of thousands of cows as part of efforts to breed cattle herds which are more resistant to tuberculos­is.

The disease is a major problem for dairy and beef farmers in some parts of the country, and efforts to curb TB in cattle include the controvers­ial badger cull, as the wild animals can spread infection to livestock on farms.

Experts say that improving prediction­s for which cattle

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are more naturally resistant to TB will help farmers breed animals which are less likely to catch and pass on the disease.

The mass-profiling project by the Agricultur­e and Horticultu­re Developmen­t Board (AHDB), partnering with Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC), is one of two schemes by the organisati­ons on genetic resistance to TB in cattle.

It builds on recent AHDB research which identified significan­t genetic variations between resistant and nonresista­nt individual animals.

Employing the same techniques used to establish if people have an inherited risk of cancer or certain diseases, the researcher­s will look for “genetic signatures” for TB resistance in 12,000 cows in affected herds.

Testing large numbers of animals will improve the accuracy of “genomic prediction” measures being developed to help farmers choose which cattle to breed and keep on the basis of TB resistance.

Although no cattle have complete resistance to TB, and a large proportion of the problem will remain from infection through the environmen­t, breeding better inherited resistance into herds could make a “significan­t contributi­on”, Marco Winters, head of animal genetics for AHDB Dairy, said.

“If you think about humans, some people regularly get the flu and others go through the winter and never get problems. You see the same thing with cattle.

“There’s a genetic element, and we know from other traits with a similar level of heritabili­ty, it can make an improvemen­t. We are breeding a better inherited resistance into the national dairy herd.”

He added: “It’s part of the solution, it certainly isn’t the only solution, because it’s not a complete resistance we can breed in.”

But as TB is such a “devastatin­g disease”, anything that farmers can do to improve the situation would have an impact, he said.

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