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      Class I and class II major histocompatibility complex alleles are associated with faecal egg counts following natural, predominantly Ostertagia circumcincta infection.

      Parasitology Research
      Alleles, Animals, Feces, parasitology, Female, Genes, MHC Class I, Genes, MHC Class II, Host-Parasite Interactions, Male, Microsatellite Repeats, Ostertagia, immunology, Ostertagiasis, Parasite Egg Count, Sheep

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          Abstract

          During a previous investigation an association was found between major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-DRB1 alleles and faecal egg counts following natural infection predominantly involving Ostertagia circumcincta in a flock of Scottish Blackface sheep. To localise the disease-resistance locus we screened the same flock for an MHC class I microsatellite and a newly developed microsatellite for the DY locus located in the class IIb subregion. Some alleles at both additional loci were associated with resistance to infection. Least-squares analysis of variance indicated that in 6-month-old lambs, substitution of the most common alleles by the alleles associated with resistance would result in an 8- and a 218-fold reduction in faecal egg counts for MHC class I and DY, respectively. These results indicate that genes within the MHC genes play a large and significant role in the development of resistance to a widespread, important and natural parasite.

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