scholarly journals Spliced genes in muscle from Nelore Cattle and their association with carcass and meat quality

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Danielly B. S. Silva ◽  
Larissa F. S. Fonseca ◽  
Daniel G. Pinheiro ◽  
Ana F. B. Magalhães ◽  
Maria M. M. Muniz ◽  
...  

Abstract Transcript data obtained by RNA-Seq were used to identify differentially expressed alternatively spliced genes in ribeye muscle tissue between Nelore cattle that differed in their ribeye area (REA) or intramuscular fat content (IF). A total of 166 alternatively spliced transcripts from 125 genes were significantly differentially expressed in ribeye muscle between the highest and lowest REA groups (p ≤ 0.05). For animals selected on their IF content, 269 alternatively spliced transcripts from 219 genes were differentially expressed in ribeye muscle between the highest and lowest IF animals. Cassette exons and alternative 3′ splice sites were the most frequently found alternatively spliced transcripts for REA and IF content. For both traits, some differentially expressed alternatively spliced transcripts belonged to myosin and myotilin gene families. The hub transcripts were identified for REA (LRRFIP1, RCAN1 and RHOBTB1) and IF (TRIP12, HSPE1 and MAP2K6) have an important role to play in muscle cell degradation, development and motility. In general, transcripts were found for both traits with biological process GO terms that were involved in pathways related to protein ubiquitination, muscle differentiation, lipids and hormonal systems. Our results reinforce the biological importance of these known processes but also reveal new insights into the complexity of the whole cell muscle mRNA of Nelore cattle.

2018 ◽  
Vol 50 (3) ◽  
pp. 144-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine Chen ◽  
Alice Jih ◽  
Olivia Osborn ◽  
Sarah T. Kavaler ◽  
Wenxian Fu ◽  
...  

Highly inbred C57BL/6 mice show wide variation in their degree of insulin resistance in response to diet-induced obesity even though they are almost genetically identical. Here we employed transcriptional profiling by RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) of visceral adipose tissue (VAT) and liver in young mice to determine how gene expression patterns correlate with the later development of high-fat diet (HFD)-induced insulin resistance in adulthood. To accomplish this goal, we partially removed and banked tissues from pubertal mice. Mice subsequently received HFD followed by metabolic phenotyping to identify two well-defined groups of mice with either severe or mild insulin resistance. The remaining tissues were collected at study termination. We then applied RNA-Seq to generate transcriptome profiles associated with worsened insulin resistance before and after the initiation of HFD. We found 244 up- and 109 downregulated genes in VAT of the most insulin-resistant mice even before HFD exposure. Downregulated genes included serine protease inhibitor, major urinary protein, and complement genes; upregulated genes represented mostly muscle constituents. These gene families were also differentially expressed in VAT of mice with high or low insulin resistance after HFD. Inflammatory genes predicted insulin resistance in liver, but not in VAT. In contrast, when we compared VAT of all mice before and after HFD, differentially expressed genes were predominantly composed of immune response genes. These data show a distinct set of gene transcripts in young mice correlates with the severity of insulin resistance in adulthood, providing insight into the pathogenesis of insulin resistance in early life.


Author(s):  
Nestor Kippes ◽  
Carl VanGessel ◽  
James Hamilton ◽  
Ani Akpinar ◽  
Hikmet Budak ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundPhotoperiod signals provide important cues by which plants regulate their growth and development in response to predictable seasonal changes. Phytochromes, a family of red and far-red light receptors, play critical roles in regulating flowering time in response to changing photoperiods. A previous study showed that loss-of-function mutations in either PHYB or PHYC result in large delays in heading time and in the differential regulation of a large number of genes in wheat plants grown in an inductive long day (LD) photoperiod.ResultsWe found that under non-inductive short-day (SD) photoperiods, phyB-null and phyC-null mutants were taller, had a reduced number of tillers, longer and wider leaves, and headed later than wild-type plants. Unexpectedly, both mutants flowered earlier in SD than LD, the inverse response to that of wild-type plants. We observed a larger number of differentially expressed genes between mutants and wild-type under SD than under LD, and in both cases, the number was larger for phyB than for phyC. We identified subsets of differentially expressed and alternatively spliced genes that were specifically regulated by PHYB and PHYC in either SD or LD photoperiods, and a smaller set of genes that were regulated in both photoperiods. We observed significantly higher transcript levels of the flowering promoting genes VRN-A1, PPD-B1 and GIGANTEA in the phy-null mutants in SD than in LD, which suggests that they could contribute to the earlier flowering of the phy-null mutants in SD than in LD.ConclusionsOur study revealed an unexpected reversion of the wheat LD plants into SD plants in the phyB-null and phyC-null mutants and identified candidate genes potentially involved in this phenomenon. Our RNA-seq data provides insight into light signaling pathways in inductive and non-inductive photoperiods and a set of candidate genes to dissect the underlying developmental regulatory networks in wheat.


2020 ◽  
Vol 138 (1) ◽  
pp. 80-90
Author(s):  
Bianca Ferreira Olivieri ◽  
Camila Urbano Braz ◽  
Fernando Brito Lopes ◽  
Elisa Peripolli ◽  
Rafael Medeiros de Oliveira Silva ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Begoña Orozco-Navarrete ◽  
Jina Song ◽  
Ana Casañal ◽  
Rosangela Sozzani ◽  
Victor Flors ◽  
...  

AbstractThe strawberry Fra a 1 proteins belong to the class 10 Pathogenesis-Related (PR-10) superfamily. In strawberry, a large number of members have been identified, but only a limited number is expressed in the fruits. In this organ, Fra a 1.01 and Fra a 1.02 are the most abundant Fra proteins in the green and red fruits, respectively, however, their function remains unknown. To know the function of Fra a 1.02 we have generated transgenic lines that silence this gene, and performed metabolomics, RNA-Seq, and hormonal assays. Previous studies associated Fra a 1.02 to strawberry fruit color, but the analysis of anthocyanins in the ripe fruits showed no diminution in their content in the silenced lines. Gene ontology (GO) analysis of the genes differentially expressed indicated that oxidation/reduction was the most represented biological process. Redox state was not apparently altered since no changes were found in ascorbic acid and glutathione (GSH) reduced/oxidized ratio, but GSH content was reduced in the silenced fruits. In addition, a number of glutathione-S-transferases (GST) were down-regulated as result of Fra a 1.02-silencing. Another highly represented GO category was transport which included a number of ABC and MATE transporters. Among the regulatory genes differentially expressed WRKY33.1 and WRKY33.2 were down-regulated, which had previously been assigned a role in strawberry plant defense. A reduced expression of the VQ23 gene and a diminished content of the hormones JA, SA, and IAA were also found. These data might indicate that Fra a 1.02 participates in the defense against pathogens in the ripe strawberry fruits.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Baiyang Yu ◽  
Jianbin Liu ◽  
Di Wu ◽  
Ying Liu ◽  
Weijian Cen ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Drought stress is an adverse factor with deleterious effects on several facets of rice growth. However, the mechanism underlying drought resistance in rice remains unclear. In order to genetically understand the potential molecular mechanism for drought response in rice, a drought sensitive Chromosome Segment Substitution Line (CSSL) PY6, which was constructed by the introgression of genomic segments of drought sensitive variety LAMBAYEQUE1 into drought-resistance variety PR403 via backcrossing, was used to map the QTL locus dss-1 for its sensitive phenotype, and to reveal the impact of dss-1 on the transcriptional profiling of PY6 via RNA-seq and WGCNA (weighted gene co-expression network analysis) analysis. Results: The genetic linkage analysis showed that dss-1 was located on the short arm of chromosome 1 of rice. In contrast to PR403, the over-accumulation of H 2 O 2 and MDA that might result in drought sensitive phenotype was observed in PY6 under drought stress. In the analysis of RNA-seq data, the identified differentially expressed genes (DEGs) mainly enriched in photosynthesis-related GO terms and exhibited a down-regulation pattern of their expressions in both PY6 and PR403 in response to drought stress, indicating that the photosynthesis was greatly inhibited in rice. Further WGCNA analysis constructed a co-expression network with 26 gene modules in which 4 and 3 modules that were highly correlated with H 2 O 2 and MDA, respectively. Likewise, the GO analysis of the differentially expressed hub genes (DEHGs) enriched in H 2 O 2 -correlated modules showed that the photosynthesis related GO terms were consistently over-represented. Furthermore, functional annotation of DEHGs in H 2 O 2 and MDA correlated modules revealed a cross talk between abiotic and biotic stresses. This was reflected by the differential expression alterations of hub genes which were annotated as encoding MYBs, laccases, WRKYs, and PRs family proteins, and ZFP36 were notably observed between PY6 and PR403 in response drought stress. Conclusions: Collectively, we speculated that drought-induced the inhibition of photosynthesis lead to the accumulation of H 2 O 2 and MDA that can trigger the reprogramming the profiling of transcriptome in rice. This included the differential regulation of hub genes that involve in ROS eliminated pathways to prevent the damage of rice plants from oxidative stress.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 1972-1972
Author(s):  
Abderrahmane Bousta ◽  
Sabrina Bondu ◽  
Alexandre Houy ◽  
Nicolas Cagnard ◽  
Carine Lefevre ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction SF3B1 hotspot mutations are associated with various cancers like uveal melanoma, chronic lymphocytic leukemia and myelodysplastic syndrome with ring sideroblasts (MDS-RS). These mutations affect RNA splicing by the use of alternative branchpoints resulting in an aberrant 3' splice site (ss) selection. RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) analyzed to quantify exon-exon junctions identified aberrantly spliced transcripts in target genes, and half of them are predicted to be degraded by non-sense mediated decay. For this reason, target genes in SF3B1-mutated MDS remain partially characterized. In the present study, we performed deep RNA-seq analysis of bone marrow mononuclear cells in low/int-1 MDS with SF3B1 mutations to identify aberrant/cryptic splicing events among up or down-regulated gene sets. Methods SF3B1 MUT MDS (n=21) were compared to 6 SF3B1WT cases and 5 controls. Analysis of RNA-seq read count was performed using the Voom method associated with the Limma empirical Bayes analysis pipeline (https://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/gb-2014-15-2-r29). Up or downregulated gene sets were identified using Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA, false discovery rate<0.1). Gene expression profiling data (Affymetrix Hu2.0) were also available for 26/27 patient samples. TopHat (v2.0.6) was used to align the reads against the human reference genome Hg19 RefSeq (RNA sequences, GRCh37) downloaded from the UCSC Genome Browser (http://genome.ucsc.edu). Read counts for splicing junctions from junctions.bed TopHat output were considered for a differential analysis using DESeq2. Only alternative acceptor splice sites (two or more 3′ss with junctions to the same 5′ss) and alternative donor splice sites (two or more 5′ss with junctions to the same 3′ss) with P-values ≤10−5 (Benjamini-Hochberg) and absolute Log2 (fold change) ≥1 were considered. Results Principal component analysis (PCA) nicely discriminated controls from patients, and patients according to the presence of a SF3B1 mutation. A set of 6971 genes was differently expressed (P- value<0.05) between SF3B1MUT and SF3B1WT cases and allows unsupervised clustering in two separated groups (Fig. 1). Distinct gene sets also discriminated SF3B1MUT or SF3B1WT from controls. Consistent with increased amount of erythroblasts in MDS-RS bone marrows, a set of erythroid genes including several genes involved in hemebiosynthesis pathway (ALAD, UROS, ALAS2, UROD) was significantly enriched in SF3B1MUT samples. Genes selected for their involvement in the core iron-sulfur cluster mitochondrial machinery (FXN, BOLA3, FDXR, GLRX5, ISCA2, NFS1, ISCU), the iron binding and trafficking (SLC25A38, ABCB10, TFR2, SLC25A37, ABCB6, FAM132B, SLC25A39, FTH1) and the cellular iron homeostasis (ACO1, ACO2, GLRX3) were also significantly enriched (FDR<10% and nominal P-value<0.05) when input in GSEA. Moreover, other enriched gene sets were G2M checkpoint, MYC targets, oxidative phosphorylation and E2F targets. All of these observations were similarly obtained when analyzing Affymetrix data. Furthermore SF3B1MUT samples with a K700E substitution harbored a specific pattern of deregulated genes, which allowed the ordering of SF3B1MUT samples according to the type of substitution. As previously reported by AlsafadiS et al (2016), analysis of splice junctions using DESeq2 revealed an overall high level of differences between SF3B1MUT and SF3B1WTsamples. Among more than 540 differentially spliced junctions, more than 80% involved an aberrant acceptor (3'ss) site. As determined by PCA, the top 50 genes associated with relevant aberrant junctions were linked to iron metabolism or erythropoiesis and differentially expressed between SF3B1MUT and SF3B1WTsamples. Conclusion In this study, we combined robust analyses of gene expression and aberrantly spliced transcript expression in MDS with SF3B1 mutation. By comparing SF3B1MUTversus SF3B1WT samples, we identified a set of deregulated genes in which both normally and aberrantly spliced transcripts were detected that could contribute to the physiopathology of MDS-RS. Figure 1 Hierarchical clustering and heatmapshowing differentially expressed genes (P-value<0.05) between SF3B1MUT (n=21, black) and SF3B1WT samples (n=6, grey) Ref. Alsafadi S et al. Nat Commun. 2016 Feb 4;7:10615. Figure 1. Hierarchical clustering and heatmapshowing differentially expressed genes (P-value<0.05) between SF3B1MUT (n=21, black) and SF3B1WT samples (n=6, grey) Ref. Alsafadi S et al. Nat Commun. 2016 Feb 4;7:10615. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (11) ◽  
pp. e0260017
Author(s):  
Kai Ma ◽  
Xiang Luo ◽  
Liqun Han ◽  
Yu Zhao ◽  
Aisajan Mamat ◽  
...  

Flower bud development is a defining feature of walnut, which contributes to the kernel yield, yield stability, fruit quality and commodity value. However, little is known about the mechanism of the flower bud development in walnut. Here, the stages of walnut female flower bud development were divided into five period (P01-05) by using histological observation. They were further studied through PacBio Iso-Seq and RNA-seq analysis. Accordingly, we obtained 52,875 full-length transcripts, where 4,579 were new transcripts, 3,065 were novel genes, 1,437 were consensus lncRNAs and 20,813 were alternatively spliced isoforms. These transcripts greatly improved the current genome annotation and enhanced our understanding of the walnut transcriptome. Next, RNA sequencing of female flower buds at five periods revealed that circadian rhythm-plant was commonly enriched along with the flower bud developmental gradient. A total of 14 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were identified, and six of them were confirmed by real-time quantitative analysis. Additionally, six and two differentially expressed clock genes were detected to be regulated by AS events and lncRNAs, respectively. All these detected plant circadian genes form a complex interconnected network to regulate the flower bud development. Thus, investigation of key genes associated with the circadian clock could clarify the process of flower bud development in walnut.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Swee Cheng Loh ◽  
Ahmad Sofiman Othman ◽  
G. Veera Singham

Abstract Hevea brasiliensis remains the primary crop commercially exploited to obtain latex, which is produced from the articulated secondary laticifer. Here, we described the transcriptional events related to jasmonic acid (JA)- and linolenic acid (LA)-induced secondary laticifer differentiation (SLD) in H. brasiliensis clone RRIM 600 based on RNA-seq approach. Histochemical approach proved that JA- and LA-treated samples resulted in SLD in H. brasiliensis when compared to ethephon and untreated control. RNA-seq data resulted in 86,614 unigenes, of which 2,664 genes were differentially expressed in JA and LA-induced secondary laticifer harvested from H. brasiliensis bark samples. Among these, 450 genes were unique to JA and LA as they were not differentially expressed in ethephon-treated samples compared with the untreated samples. Most transcription factors from the JA- and LA-specific dataset were classified under MYB, APETALA2/ethylene response factor (AP2/ERF), and basic-helix-loop-helix (bHLH) gene families that were involved in tissue developmental pathways, and we proposed that Bel5-GA2 oxidase 1-KNOTTED-like homeobox complex are likely involved in JA- and LA-induced SLD in H. brasiliensis. We also discovered alternative spliced transcripts, putative novel transcripts, and cis-natural antisense transcript pairs related to SLD event. This study has advanced understanding on the transcriptional regulatory network of SLD in H. brasiliensis.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Almas Jabeen ◽  
Nadeem Ahmad ◽  
Khalid Raza

Zika virus (ZIKV) is considered to be an emerging viral outbreak due to its link to diseases like microcephaly, Guillain-Barre Syndrome in human. In this paper, we identify differentially expressed genes (DEGs) using RNA-seq data. In this study, we adopted the RNA-seq analysis pipeline to quantify RNA-seq data into read counts. Our analysis uncovers the significant DEGs which may be involved in the altered biological process somehow. Here, we report the list of significant DEGs, out of which three genes are found to be highly differentially expressed. In addition, our analysis also predicts other moderate DEGs, low DEGs whose differential expression was induced due to ZIKV infections.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuxin Yang ◽  
Xueying Zhang ◽  
Lichao Zhang ◽  
Guoxiang Liu ◽  
Chuan Xia ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Wheat is one of the most widely planted crops worldwide. The heading date is important for wheat environmental adaptability; it not only controls flowering time but also determines the yield component in terms of the grain number per spike. Results: In this research, homozygous genotypes with early and late heading dates derived from backcrossed progeny were selected to conduct RNA-seq analysis at the double ridge stage and androgynous primordium differentiation stage of the leaf and apical meristem, respectively. In total, 18,352 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were identified. Five common GO terms and 214 common metabolic pathways were obtained by MapMan software. In addition, 1,225 DEGs were annotated to 52 transcription factor gene families, and we discovered that most of the LFY, SBP, and MADS-box genes were highly expressed during the apical development of wheat with the early heading date. Additionally, weighted gene coexpression network analysis (WGCNA) found that the DEGs clustered into 17 coexpression modules, and 16, 336, 446, and 124 DEGs had biological connections with Vrn1-5A, Vrn3-7B, Ppd-1D, and WSOC1, respectively. The 16 genes connected with Vrn1-5A were divided into three types of expression patterns. We further identified one important flowering time gene, TraesCS2D02G181400, which is a MADS-MIKC transcriptional factor and has a biological connection with Vrn1-5A. Gene function showed that this gene was differentially expressed at the A2.0 and L3.5 stages between the genotypes with early and late heading.Conclusions: The RNA-seq analysis results in our present research are a valuable bioinformatics resource for further study of the molecular mechanism of the wheat heading date. Overall, our results shed light on the genetic architecture of wheat flowering time.


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