Repository logoRepository logo
GRO
  • GRO.data
  • GRO.plan
Help
  • English
  • Deutsch
Log In
New user? Click here to register.Have you forgotten your password?
Publications
Researcher
Organizations
Other
  • Journals
  • Series
  • Events
  • Projects
  • Working Groups

Browsing by Author "Jagannathan, Vidhya"

Filter results by typing the first few letters
Now showing 1 - 5 of 5
  • Results Per Page
  • Sort Options
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    A Nonsense Variant in the ST14 Gene in Akhal-Teke Horses with Naked Foal Syndrome
    (Genetics Society America, 2017)
    Bauer, Anina
    ;
    Hiemesch, Theresa
    ;
    Jagannathan, Vidhya
    ;
    Neuditschko, Markus
    ;
    Bachmann, Iris
    ;
    Rieder, Stefan
    ;
    Mikko, Sofia
    ;
    Penedo, M. Cecilia
    ;
    Tarasova, Nadja
    ;
    Vitkova, Martina
    ;
    Sirtori, Nicolo
    ;
    Roccabianca, Paola
    ;
    Leeb, Tosso
    ;
    Welle, Monika M.
    Naked foal syndrome (NFS) is a genodermatosis in the Akhal-Teke horse breed. We provide the first scientific description of this phenotype. Affected horses have almost no hair and show a mild ichthyosis. So far, all known NFS affected horses died between a few weeks and 3 yr of age. It is not clear whether a specific pathology caused the premature deaths. NFS is inherited as a monogenic autosomal recessive trait. We mapped the disease causing genetic variant to two segments on chromosomes7 and 27 in the equine genome. Whole genome sequencing of two affected horses, two obligate carriers, and 75 control horses from other breeds revealed a single nonsynonymous genetic variant on the chromosome7 segment that was perfectly associated with NFS. The affected horses were homozygous for ST14:c.388G>T, a nonsense variant that truncates >80% of the open reading frame of the ST14 gene (p.Glu130 ). The variant leads to partial nonsense-mediated decay of the mutant transcript. Genetic variants in the ST14 gene are responsible for autosomal recessive congenital ichthyosis 11 in humans. Thus, the identified equine ST14:c.388G>T variant is an excellent candidate causative variant for NFS, and the affected horses represent a large animal model for a known human genodermatosis. Our findings will enable genetic testing to avoid the nonintentional breeding of NFS-affected foals.
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    A structural variant in the 5'-flanking region of the TWIST2 gene affects melanocyte development in belted cattle
    (Public Library Science, 2017)
    Mishra, Nivedita Awasthi
    ;
    Droegemueller, Cord
    ;
    Jagannathan, Vidhya
    ;
    Keller, Irene
    ;
    Wuthrich, Daniel
    ;
    Bruggmann, Remy
    ;
    Beck, Julia
    ;
    Schuetz, Ekkehard  
    ;
    Brenig, Bertram  
    ;
    Demmel, Steffi
    ;
    Moser, Simon
    ;
    Signer-Hasler, Heidi
    ;
    Pienkowska-Schelling, Aldona
    ;
    Schelling, Claude
    ;
    Sande, Marcos
    ;
    Rongen, Ronald
    ;
    Rieder, Stefan
    ;
    Kelsh, Robert N.
    ;
    Mercader, Nadia
    ;
    Leeb, Tosso
    Belted cattle have a circular belt of unpigmented hair and skin around their midsection. The belt is inherited as a monogenic autosomal dominant trait. We mapped the causative variant to a 37 kb segment on bovine chromosome 3. Whole genome sequence data of 2 belted and 130 control cattle yielded only one private genetic variant in the critical interval in the two belted animals. The belt-associated variant was a copy number variant (CNV) involving the quadruplication of a 6 kb non-coding sequence located approximately 16 kb upstream of the TWIST2 gene. Increased copy numbers at this CNV were strongly associated with the belt phenotype in a cohort of 333 cases and 1322 controls. We hypothesized that the CNV causes aberrant expression of TWIST2 during neural crest development, which might negatively affect melanoblasts. Functional studies showed that ectopic expression of bovine TWIST2 in neural crest in transgenic zebrafish led to a decrease in melanocyte numbers. Our results thus implicate an unsuspected involvement of TWIST2 in regulating pigmentation and reveal a non-coding CNV underlying a captivating Mendelian character.
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Developing a 670k genotyping array to tag ~2M SNPs across 24 horse breeds
    (2017)
    Schaefer, Robert J.
    ;
    Schubert, Mikkel
    ;
    Bailey, Ernest
    ;
    Bannasch, Danika L.
    ;
    Barrey, Eric
    ;
    Bar-Gal, Gila Kahila
    ;
    Brem, Gottfried
    ;
    Brooks, Samantha A.
    ;
    Distl, Ottmar
    ;
    Fries, Ruedi
    ;
    Finno, Carrie J.
    ;
    Gerber, Vinzenz
    ;
    Haase, Bianca
    ;
    Jagannathan, Vidhya
    ;
    Kalbfleisch, Ted
    ;
    Leeb, Tosso
    ;
    Lindgren, Gabriella
    ;
    Lopes, Maria Susana
    ;
    Mach, Núria
    ;
    da Câmara Machado, Artur
    ;
    MacLeod, James N.
    ;
    McCoy, Annette
    ;
    Metzger, Julia
    ;
    Penedo, Cecilia
    ;
    Polani, Sagi
    ;
    Rieder, Stefan
    ;
    Tammen, Imke
    ;
    Tetens, Jens  
    ;
    Thaller, Georg
    ;
    Verini-Supplizi, Andrea
    ;
    Wade, Claire M.
    ;
    Wallner, Barbara
    ;
    Orlando, Ludovic
    ;
    Mickelson, James R.
    ;
    McCue, Molly E.
    BACKGROUND: To date, genome-scale analyses in the domestic horse have been limited by suboptimal single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) density and uneven genomic coverage of the current SNP genotyping arrays. The recent availability of whole genome sequences has created the opportunity to develop a next generation, high-density equine SNP array. RESULTS: Using whole genome sequence from 153 individuals representing 24 distinct breeds collated by the equine genomics community, we cataloged over 23 million de novo discovered genetic variants. Leveraging genotype data from individuals with both whole genome sequence, and genotypes from lower-density, legacy SNP arrays, a subset of ~5 million high-quality, high-density array candidate SNPs were selected based on breed representation and uniform spacing across the genome. Considering probe design recommendations from a commercial vendor (Affymetrix, now Thermo Fisher Scientific) a set of ~2 million SNPs were selected for a next-generation high-density SNP chip (MNEc2M). Genotype data were generated using the MNEc2M array from a cohort of 332 horses from 20 breeds and a lower-density array, consisting of ~670 thousand SNPs (MNEc670k), was designed for genotype imputation. CONCLUSIONS: Here, we document the steps taken to design both the MNEc2M and MNEc670k arrays, report genomic and technical properties of these genotyping platforms, and demonstrate the imputation capabilities of these tools for the domestic horse.
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    The horse Y chromosome as an informative marker for tracing sire lines
    (2019)
    Felkel, Sabine
    ;
    Vogl, Claus
    ;
    Rigler, Doris
    ;
    Dobretsberger, Viktoria
    ;
    Chowdhary, Bhanu P.
    ;
    Distl, Ottmar
    ;
    Fries, Ruedi
    ;
    Jagannathan, Vidhya
    ;
    Janečka, Jan E.
    ;
    Leeb, Tosso
    ;
    Lindgren, Gabriella
    ;
    McCue, Molly
    ;
    Metzger, Julia
    ;
    Neuditschko, Markus
    ;
    Rattei, Thomas
    ;
    Raudsepp, Terje
    ;
    Rieder, Stefan
    ;
    Rubin, Carl-Johan
    ;
    Schaefer, Robert
    ;
    Schlötterer, Christian
    ;
    Thaller, Georg
    ;
    Tetens, Jens  
    ;
    Velie, Brandon
    ;
    Brem, Gottfried
    ;
    Wallner, Barbara
    Analysis of the Y chromosome is the best-established way to reconstruct paternal family history in humans. Here, we applied fine-scaled Y-chromosomal haplotyping in horses with biallelic markers and demonstrate the potential of our approach to address the ancestry of sire lines. We de novo assembled a draft reference of the male-specific region of the Y chromosome from Illumina short reads and then screened 5.8 million basepairs for variants in 130 specimens from intensively selected and rural breeds and nine Przewalski's horses. Among domestic horses we confirmed the predominance of a young'crown haplogroup' in Central European and North American breeds. Within the crown, we distinguished 58 haplotypes based on 211 variants, forming three major haplogroups. In addition to two previously characterised haplogroups, one observed in Arabian/Coldblooded and the other in Turkoman/Thoroughbred horses, we uncovered a third haplogroup containing Iberian lines and a North African Barb Horse. In a genealogical showcase, we distinguished the patrilines of the three English Thoroughbred founder stallions and resolved a historic controversy over the parentage of the horse 'Galopin', born in 1872. We observed two nearly instantaneous radiations in the history of Central and Northern European Y-chromosomal lineages that both occurred after domestication 5,500 years ago.
  • Some of the metrics are blocked by your 
    consent settings
    Y Chromosome Uncovers the Recent Oriental Origin of Modern Stallions
    (2017)
    Wallner, Barbara
    ;
    Palmieri, Nicola
    ;
    Vogl, Claus
    ;
    Rigler, Doris
    ;
    Bozlak, Elif
    ;
    Druml, Thomas
    ;
    Jagannathan, Vidhya
    ;
    Leeb, Tosso
    ;
    Fries, Ruedi
    ;
    Tetens, Jens  
    ;
    Thaller, Georg
    ;
    Metzger, Julia
    ;
    Distl, Ottmar
    ;
    Lindgren, Gabriella
    ;
    Rubin, Carl-Johan
    ;
    Andersson, Leif
    ;
    Schaefer, Robert
    ;
    McCue, Molly
    ;
    Neuditschko, Markus
    ;
    Rieder, Stefan
    ;
    Schlötterer, Christian
    ;
    Brem, Gottfried

About

About Us
FAQ
ORCID
End User Agreement
Privacy policy
Cookie consent
Imprint

Contact

Team GRO.publications
support-gro.publications@uni-goettingen.de
Matrix Chat: #support_gro_publications
Feedback

Göttingen Research Online

Göttingen Research Online bundles various services for Göttingen researchers:

GRO.data (research data repository)
GRO.plan (data management planning)
GRO.publications (publication data repository)
Logo Uni Göttingen
Logo Campus Göttingen
Logo SUB Göttingen
Logo eResearch Alliance

Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.