“…As shown in most Italian (Curcio et al, 2015;Granato et al, 2013;Kaam, Vitale, Portolano, Vitale, & Caracappa, 2005) and European breeds (Álvarez et al, 2009;Cubric Curik et al, 2010;Drögemüller, Leeb, & Distl, 2001;Garcia-Crespo et al, 2004;Goldmann, Baylis, Chihota, Stevenson, & Hunter, 2005;Gorjanc, Plohl, & Kompan, 2008;Hurtado et al, 2002;Lühken, Lipsky, Peter, & Erhardt, 2008;Sipos, Kraus, Schmoll, Achmann, & Baumgartner, 2002;Thorgeirsdottir, Sigurdarson, Thorisson, Georgsson, & Palsdottir, 1999), the predominant PRNP allele across all six breeds was ARQ, which was present in more than a half of the entire population analysed, and particularly in the TS breed (66%), as shown by Sipos et al (2002) in Austrian sheep breeds. Since ARQ is considered the wild-type ancestral allele of PRNP (Drögemüller et al, 2001), we easily expected that it was more present in this breed, because it is the oldest of the ovine breeds present in the Tyrol area (http:// www.fao.org/dad-is/en/).…”