Publication | Open Access
High prevalence of prion protein genotype associated with resistance to chronic wasting disease in one Alberta woodland caribou population
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Citations
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References
2017
Year
BiologyPrion Protein GenotypeMolecular EcologyMedicineGeneticsHigh PrevalenceCwd Management StrategiesPrion DiseaseWildlife ManagementDisease EcologyGenetic VariationPublic HealthWildlife BiologyPopulation GeneticsCwd SusceptibilityEpidemiologyConservation Biology
Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a prion disease found in deer, elk and moose in North America and since recently, wild reindeer in Norway. Caribou are at-risk to encounter CWD in areas such as Alberta, Canada, where the disease spreads toward caribou habitats. CWD susceptibility is modulated by species-specific polymorphisms in the prion protein gene (Prnp). We sequenced Prnp of woodland caribou from 9 Albertan populations. In one population (Chinchaga) a significantly higher frequency of the 138N allele linked to reduced CWD susceptibility was observed. These data are relevant for developing CWD management strategies including conservation of threatened caribou populations.
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