open access publication

Article, 2024

Comparative analysis of swine leukocyte antigen gene diversity in Gottingen Minipigs

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY, ISSN 1664-3224, 1664-3224, Volume 15, 10.3389/fimmu.2024.1360022

Contributors

Hammer, Sabine E. (Corresponding author) [1] Duckova, Tereza [1] Gociman, Monica [1] Groiss, Sandra [1] Pernold, Clara P. S. [1] Hacker, Karolin [2] Kasper, Lena [3] Sprung, Julia [1] Stadler, Maria [1] Jensen, Andres [4] Saalmueller, Armin [1] Wenzel, Nadine [2] Figueiredo, Constanca [2]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Univ Vet Med Vienna, Dept Pathobiol, Immunol, Vienna, Austria
  2. [NORA names: Austria; Europe, EU; OECD];
  3. [2] Inst Transfus Med & Transplant Engn, Hannover Med Sch, Hannover, Germany
  4. [NORA names: Germany; Europe, EU; OECD];
  5. [3] Merck Healthcare KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany
  6. [NORA names: Germany; Europe, EU; OECD];
  7. [4] Ellegaard Gottingen Minipigs AS, Dalmose, Denmark
  8. [NORA names: Other Companies; Private Research; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Worldwide, pigs represent economically important farm animals, also representing a preferred preclinical large animal model for biomedical studies. The need for swine leukocyte antigen (SLA) typing is increasing with the expanded use of pigs in translational research, infection studies, and for veterinary vaccine design. Gottingen Minipigs (GMP) attract increasing attention as valuable model for pharmacological studies and transplantation research. This study represents a first-time assessment of the SLA gene diversity in Gottingen Minipigs in combination with a comparative metadata analysis with commercial pig lines. As Gottingen Minipigs could harbor private as well as potential novel SLA allele combinations, future research projects would benefit from the characterization of their SLA background. In 209 Gottingen Minipigs, SLA class I (SLA-1, SLA-2, SLA-3) and class II (DRB1, DQB1, DQA) genes were characterized by PCR-based low-resolution (Lr) haplotyping. Criteria and nomenclature used for SLA haplotyping were proposed by the ISAG/IUIS-VIC SLA Nomenclature Committee. Haplotypes were assigned based on the comparison with already known breed or farm-specific allele group combinations. In total, 14 SLA class I and five SLA class II haplotypes were identified in the studied cohort, to manifest in 26 SLA class I but only seven SLA class II genotypes. The most common SLA class I haplotypes Lr-24.0 (SLA-1*15XX or Blank-SLA-3*04:04-SLA-2*06:01 similar to 02) and Lr-GMP-3.0 (SLA-1*16:02-SLA-3*03:04-SLA-2*17:01) occurred at frequencies of 23.44 and 18.66%, respectively. For SLA class II, the most prevalent haplotypes Lr-0.21 (DRB1*01XX-DQB1*05XX-DQA*04XX) and Lr-0.03 (DRB1*03:02-DQB1*03:01-DQA*01XX) occurred at frequencies of 38.28 and 30.38%. The comparative metadata analysis revealed that Gottingen Minipigs only share six SLA class I and two SLA class II haplotypes with commercial pig lines. More importantly, despite the limited number of SLA class I haplotypes, the high genotype diversity being observed necessitates pre-experimental SLA background assessment of Gottingen Minipigs in regenerative medicine, allo-transplantation, and xenograft research.

Keywords

Sus scrofa, animal model, biomedical research and development, polymorphism, swine leukocyte antigen (SLA), transplantation, xenograft

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