Date: June 6, 2019
Source: Penn State
Some deer
are more susceptible to chronic wasting disease that is spreading through herds
of white-tailed deer across much of the United States, according to Penn State
researchers, who have identified a panel of genetic markers that reliably
predict which animals are most vulnerable to the contagious neurological
disorder.
"The
genetic variants that would make deer less susceptible to chronic wasting
disease are in much lower frequency in the East, likely because they weren't
needed," said David Walter, adjunct assistant professor of wildlife
ecology. "Over a long period of time, their survivability may have been
somehow favored by losing these genotypes. They weren't important until a
disease like chronic wasting disease showed up. We have seen that deer with the
more susceptible genotypes are in the majority."
Over the
last decade or so, Walter's research group in the College of Agricultural
Sciences has been studying how the movement, behavior and genetics of wild deer
are affecting the spread of chronic wasting disease. Often referred to as CWD,
it is a fatal prion disease affecting the deer family, and belongs to a group
of similar diseases, such as mad cow disease and scrapie in sheep, called
transmissible spongiform encephalopathies.
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