1e. Marker-Assisted Selection to breed for resistance to Infectious Pancreatic Necrosis in Salmon
Submitting Institutions
University of Edinburgh,
SRUCUnit of Assessment
Agriculture, Veterinary and Food ScienceSummary Impact Type
EnvironmentalResearch Subject Area(s)
Biological Sciences: Genetics
Summary of the impact
Impact: Economic, animal health and welfare: Genetic markers have
enabled selection of salmon
lines with improved virus resistance
Significance: UK salmon industry benefit estimated at ~£26
million/annum GVA following
identification of a genetic trait conferring resistance to an economically
devastating viral disease.
Beneficiaries: Salmon farming industry, consumers
Attribution: Work performed by Houston, Bishop, Woolliams and
Haley (Roslin Institute, now part
of UoE).
Reach: Aquaculture industry internationally, i.e. Europe and South
America (Chile).
Underpinning research
In recent decades, the viral disease infectious pancreatic necrosis (IPN)
has been a major
constraint on salmon aquaculture, spreading rapidly among salmon farms in
Scotland, Norway,
Chile, USA, Canada and other countries. Typical mortality levels in an
epidemic are ~25%, and
severe outbreaks are known to kill as many as 80-90% of farmed fish. No
vaccine is effective in
very young fish.
BBSRC-funded research (response-mode grant 2004-2007) at The Roslin
Institute, University of
Edinburgh led by group leaders Professor Bishop (Roslin Institute and UoE,
employed 1988-
onwards), Professor Woolliams (Roslin Institute and UoE, employed
1977-onwards) and Professor
Haley (Roslin Institute and UoE, employed 1985-onwards) demonstrated that
host resistance (i.e.
survival) is a heritable trait [3.1] and that the observed genetic
differences are almost entirely due
to variation in a single quantitative trait locus (QTL) of the salmon
genome [3.2]. The large effect of
the QTL on resistance was consistent in seawater cages [3.2] and in
controlled freshwater
disease-challenge experiments [3.3] (funded by a second response-mode
grant: 2007-2010). Fish
inheriting two copies of the resistant variant of the QTL from their
parents have negligible mortality,
whereas those receiving the susceptible variant from both parents have
mortality levels higher than
50% during epidemics [3.2-3.4] The disease resistance effect does not
appear to show any
negative correlations with other economically important production traits
[3.5].
The results of this research led to a long-term collaborative research
partnership between The
Roslin Institute and the salmon breeding company Landcatch Natural
Selection (LNS) Ltd. In 2008,
via a knowledge transfer project (KTP associate Dr Gheyas), a method was
developed with the
breeding company to incorporate this QTL into selective breeding programs
using microsatellite
information to select more resistant breeding fish.
Since 2010, Houston (career track fellow, 2010-onwards) has led a BBSRC
career-path fellowship
project in which the differences in DNA and RNA sequence between salmon
carrying resistant
alleles and those carrying susceptible alleles have been investigated
using high-throughput
sequencing technology. This has enabled the detection of more closely
linked single nucleotide
polymorphism (SNP) markers that show association with resistance to the
IPN virus at the
population level [3.4].
Incorporation of these improved markers into industry selective breeding
programmes has further
improved the accuracy and simplicity of genetic tests that enable the
identification of IPN-resistant
fish at an early stage from a sample of its DNA [3.5]
References to the research
3.1 Guy DR, Bishop SC, Woolliams JA, Brotherstone S (2009) Genetic
parameters for resistance
to Infectious Pancreatic Necrosis in pedigreed Atlantic salmon (Salmo
salar) post-smolts using
a Reduced Animal Model. Aquaculture 290: 229-235.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2009.02.015
3.2 Houston RD, Haley CS, Hamilton A, Guy DR, Tinch AE, Taggart JB,
McAndrew BJ, Bishop SC
(2008). Major QTL Affect Resistance to Infectious Pancreatic Necrosis in
Atlantic Salmon
(Salmo salar). Genetics 178: 1109-1115. http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/genetics.107.082974
3.3 Houston RD, Haley CS, Hamilton A, Guy DR, Mota-Velasco J, Gheyas AA,
Tinch AE, Taggart
JB, Bron JE, Starkey WG, McAndrew BJ, Verner-Jeffreys DW, Paley RK, Rimmer
GSE, Tew
IJ, Bishop SC (2010). The susceptibility of Atlantic salmon fry to
freshwater Infectious
Pancreatic Necrosis is largely explained by a major QTL. Heredity 105:
318-327.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/hdy.2009.171
3.4 Houston RD, Davey JW, Bishop SC, Lowe NR, Mota-Velasco JC, Hamilton
A, Guy DR, Tinch,
AE, Thomson ML, Blaxter ML, Gharbi K, Bron JE, Taggart JB (2012)
Characterisation of QTL-
linked and genome-wide restriction site-associated DNA (RAD) markers in
farmed Atlantic
salmon. BMC Genomics 13, 244. 13:244. http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-13-244
3.5 Gheyas AA, Haley CS, Guy DR, Hamilton A, Tinch AE, Mota-Velasco JC,
Woolliams JA (2010)
Effect of a major QTL affecting IPN resistance on production traits in
Atlantic salmon. Animal
Genetics 41: 666-668. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2052.2010.02051.x
Details of the impact
As a result of our research in 2008 the salmon-breeding company with
which it was collaborating,
Landcatch Natural Selection (LNS) Ltd, implemented marker-assisted
selection (MAS) for IPN
resistance when selecting its elite and commercial salmon populations.
This is the first successful
documented example of MAS in any aquaculture species. A license agreement
between The
Roslin Institute and LNS enabled a molecular genetic test for IPN
resistance incorporating the QTL
resistance markers to be sold internationally to aquaculture companies.
The size of impact of the research is quantified in an economic analysis
by Roslin and LNS,
validated by BiGGAR economics. IPN resistance, using MAS, reduces IPN
mortality by 25% (i.e.
from ~25% on average to virtually zero). After taking account of the
market share of LNS for the
eggs and smolts required by UK salmon industry, this equates to an
economic impact of £26.4
million GVA (comprising reduced costs and losses, as well as greater
output of marketable
salmon) and between 360 and 450 jobs across the UK. As LNS also supplies
15%-20% of the
eggs and smolts required by the global salmon farming industry, similar
impacts can be
documented overseas as well.
Other important impacts are also identifiable. Salmon farming is heavily
concentrated in the
Scottish Highlands and Islands, and therefore provides employment in some
of the remotest
communities in the UK where few alternative opportunities exist. Severe
outbreaks of IPN are
potentially devastating for such communities; hence this research supports
these fragile rural
communities.
Implementation of the findings also reduces the ecological impact of
salmon farming as IPN is an
endemic infectious disease that affects both wild and farmed salmon.
This innovation has been hailed as a highly successful example of the
application of BBSRC
research for industrial benefit, and led to an effective Knowledge
Transfer Partnership5.1 (KTP).
The innovation and related findings have been widely communicated through
different media
(including numerous press releases, scientific and industry publications
and presentations5.2-5.7) to
ensure widespread publicity. The KTP associate (Dr. Gheyas) won the KTP
Centres in Scotland
prize for Best Project Presentation. Dr. Houston won the 2012 Knowledge
Exchange and
Commercialisation Prize at The Roslin Institute Staff Awards for his role
in the commercial
application of the IPN resistance tests.
Furthermore, the research translation process has served as a paradigm
for other economically
important diseases. LNS Ltd received funding in March 2011 via the
Technology Strategy
Board/BBSRC Genomes UK: Exploiting the Potential of High-Throughput
Sequencing funding
competition to further develop the high-density salmon single-nucleotide
polymorphism (SNP) chip,
which will be a key tool for improving the competitiveness and
sustainability of the UK salmon
farming industry. The project has resulted in the successful production of
the world's first high-
density SNP array for an aquaculture species, which is now being applied
to select salmon for
increased resistance to sea louse infestations in collaboration with the
Universities of Edinburgh,
Stirling and Glasgow and world-leading microarray supplier, Affymetrix
Ltd. This new application of
genomic technologies has been made possible by the success in finding
genomic solutions to IPN.
Sources to corroborate the impact
5.1) Knowledge Transfer Partnership case study on Landcatch Natural
Selection:
http://tinyurl.com/qzvsw3q
5.2) IPN Salmon gene research progress: UK Scientists close in on salmon
virus resistance
gene. Published: 31 January, 2011. Source: FISHupdate.com http://tinyurl.com/qexaxc6
5.3) Knowledge Transfer Prize for LNS & Roslin Institute. Published:
10 February, 2009.
Source: FISHupdate.com http://tinyurl.com/qj6rjy2
5.4) Landcatch Natural Selection Article. `Markers show the way forward'.
http://tinyurl.com/ps3279q
5.5) Sustained Genetic Progress Boosts Commercial Performance. Published:
Thursday, March
27, 2008. Source: The FishSite.com. http://tinyurl.com/owh2n2w
5.6) Genetic discovery gives performance and welfare benefits. Published: 06
February 2008.
Source: fishfarmingxpert.com.
http://tinyurl.com/p3ops2p
5.7) Salmon breeding takes a 'quantum leap'. Published: Wednesday, August
15, 2007. Source:
The FishSite.com. http://tinyurl.com/o2pkukb