scholarly journals Copy Number Variations Contribute to Intramuscular Fat Content Differences By Affecting The Expression of PELP1 Alternative Splices in Pig

Author(s):  
Ligang Wang ◽  
Tian Zhang ◽  
Li Na ◽  
Longchao Zhang ◽  
Xinhua Hou ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Intramuscular fat (IMF) is a key meat quality trait. Research on the genetic mechanisms of IMF decomposition is valuable for both pork quality improvement and the treatment of obesity and type 2 diabetes. Copy number variations (CNVs) are a type of variant that may influence meat quality.ResultsIn this study, a total of 1185 CNV regions (CNVRs) including 393 duplicated CNVRs, 432 deleted CNVRs, and 361 CNVRs with both duplicated and deleted status were identified in a pig F2 resource population using next-generation sequencing data. A genome-wide association study (GWAS) was then performed between CNVs and IMF, and a total of 19 CNVRs were found to be significantly associated with IMF. QTL colocation analysis indicated that 3 of the 19 CNVRs overlapped with known QTLs. RNA-seq and qPCR validation results indicated that CNV150, which is located on the 3’UTR end of the proline, glutamate, and leucine rich protein 1 (PELP1) gene, may affect the expression of PELP1 alternative splices. Sequence alignment and Alphafold2 structure prediction results indicated that the two alternative splices of PELP1 have a 23 AA sequence variation and a helix-fold structure variation. This region is located in the region of interaction between PELP1 and other proteins which have been reported to be significantly associated with fat deposition or insulin resistance. We infer that the CNVR may influence IMF content by regulating the alternative splicing of the PELP1 gene and ultimately affecting the structure of the PELP1 protein. ConclusionsIn conclusion, we found some CNVRs, especially CNV150, located in PELP1 that affect IMF. These findings suggest a novel mechanistic approach for meat quality improvement in animals and potential treatment of insulin resistance in human beings.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ligang Wang ◽  
Zhong-Yin Zhou ◽  
Tian Zhang ◽  
Longchao Zhang ◽  
Xinhua Hou ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Intramuscular fat (IMF) is associated with meat quality and insulin resistance in animals. Research on genetic mechanism of IMF decomposition has positive meaning to pork quality and diseases such as obesity and type 2 diabetes treatment. In this study, an IMF trait segregation population was used to perform RNA sequencing and to analyze the joint or independent effects of genes and long intergenic non-coding RNAs (lincRNAs) on IMF. Results A total of 26 genes including 6 LincRNA genes show significantly different expression between high- and low-IMF pigs. Interesting, one lincRNA gene, named IMF related LincRNA (IRLnc) not only has a 292-nt conserved region in 100 vertebrates but also has conserved up and down stream genes (<10 kb) in pig and humans. Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) validation study indicated that nuclear receptor subfamily 4 group A member 3 (NR4A3) which located at the downstream of IRLnc has similar expression pattern with IRLnc. RNAi-mediated loss of function screens identified that IRLnc silencing could inhibit both of the RNA and protein expression of NR4A3. And the in-situ hybridization co-expression experiment indicates that IRLnc may directly binding to NR4A3. As the NR4A3 could regulate the catecholamine catabolism, which could affect insulin sensitivity, we inferred that IRLnc influence IMF decomposition by regulating the expression of NR4A3.Conclusions In conclusion, a novel functional noncoding variation named IRLnc have been found contribute to IMF by regulating the expression of NR4A3. These finding suggest novel mechanistic approach for treatment of insulin resistance in human beings and meat quality improvement in animal.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ligang Wang ◽  
Zhong-Yin Zhou ◽  
Tian Zhang ◽  
Longchao Zhang ◽  
Xinhua Hou ◽  
...  

Abstract BackgroundIntramuscular fat (IMF) is associated with meat quality and insulin resistance in animals. Research on genetic mechanism of IMF decomposition has positive meaning to pork quality and diseases such as obesity and type 2 diabetes treatment. In this study, an IMF trait segregation population was used to perform RNA sequencing and to analyze the joint or independent effects of genes and long intergenic non-coding RNAs (lincRNAs) on IMF.ResultsA total of 26 genes including six lincRNA genes show significantly different expression between high- and low-IMF pigs. Interesting, one lincRNA gene, named IMF related lincRNA (IRLnc) not only has a 292-bp conserved region in 100 vertebrates but also has conserved up and down stream genes (<10 kb) in pig and humans. Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) validation study indicated that nuclear receptor subfamily 4 group A member 3 (NR4A3) which located at the downstream of IRLnc has similar expression pattern with IRLnc. RNAi-mediated loss of function screens identified that IRLnc silencing could inhibit both of the RNA and protein expression of NR4A3. And the in-situ hybridization co-expression experiment indicates that IRLnc may directly binding to NR4A3. As the NR4A3 could regulate the catecholamine catabolism, which could affect insulin sensitivity, we inferred that IRLnc influence IMF decomposition by regulating the expression of NR4A3.ConclusionsIn conclusion, a novel functional noncoding variation named IRLnc has been found contribute to IMF by regulating the expression of NR4A3. These findings suggest novel mechanistic approach for treatment of insulin resistance in human beings and meat quality improvement in animal.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ligang Wang ◽  
Zhong-Yin Zhou ◽  
Tian Zhang ◽  
Longchao Zhang ◽  
Xinhua Hou ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Intramuscular fat (IMF) is associated with meat quality and insulin resistance in animals. Research on genetic mechanism of IMF decomposition has positive meaning to pork quality and diseases such as obesity and type 2 diabetes treatment. In this study, an IMF trait segregation population was used to perform RNA sequencing and to analyze the joint or independent effects of genes and long intergenic non-coding RNAs (lincRNAs) on IMF. ResultsA total of 26 genes including six lincRNA genes show significantly different expression between high- and low-IMF pigs. Interesting, one lincRNA gene, named IMF related lincRNA (IRLnc) not only has a 292-bp conserved region in 100 vertebrates but also has conserved up and down stream genes (<10 kb) in pig and humans. Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) validation study indicated that nuclear receptor subfamily 4 group A member 3 (NR4A3) which located at the downstream of IRLnc has similar expression pattern with IRLnc. RNAi-mediated loss of function screens identified that IRLnc silencing could inhibit both of the RNA and protein expression of NR4A3. And the in-situ hybridization co-expression experiment indicates that IRLnc may directly binding to NR4A3. As the NR4A3 could regulate the catecholamine catabolism, which could affect insulin sensitivity, we inferred that IRLnc influence IMF decomposition by regulating the expression of NR4A3.ConclusionsIn conclusion, a novel functional noncoding variation named IRLnc has been found contribute to IMF by regulating the expression of NR4A3. These findings suggest novel mechanistic approach for treatment of insulin resistance in human beings and meat quality improvement in animal.


BMC Genomics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ligang Wang ◽  
Zhong-Yin Zhou ◽  
Tian Zhang ◽  
Longchao Zhang ◽  
Xinhua Hou ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Intramuscular fat (IMF) is associated with meat quality and insulin resistance in animals. Research on genetic mechanism of IMF decomposition has positive meaning to pork quality and diseases such as obesity and type 2 diabetes treatment. In this study, an IMF trait segregation population was used to perform RNA sequencing and to analyze the joint or independent effects of genes and long intergenic non-coding RNAs (lincRNAs) on IMF. Results A total of 26 genes including six lincRNA genes show significantly different expression between high- and low-IMF pigs. Interesting, one lincRNA gene, named IMF related lincRNA (IRLnc) not only has a 292-bp conserved region in 100 vertebrates but also has conserved up and down stream genes (< 10 kb) in pig and humans. Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) validation study indicated that nuclear receptor subfamily 4 group A member 3 (NR4A3) which located at the downstream of IRLnc has similar expression pattern with IRLnc. RNAi-mediated loss of function screens identified that IRLnc silencing could inhibit both of the RNA and protein expression of NR4A3. And the in-situ hybridization co-expression experiment indicates that IRLnc may directly binding to NR4A3. As the NR4A3 could regulate the catecholamine catabolism, which could affect insulin sensitivity, we inferred that IRLnc influence IMF decomposition by regulating the expression of NR4A3. Conclusions In conclusion, a novel functional noncoding variation named IRLnc has been found contribute to IMF by regulating the expression of NR4A3. These findings suggest novel mechanistic approach for treatment of insulin resistance in human beings and meat quality improvement in animal.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ligang Wang ◽  
Zhong-Ying Zhou ◽  
Tian Zhang ◽  
Longchao Zhang ◽  
Xinhua Hou ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Intramuscular fat (IMF) is associated with meat quality and insulin resistance in animals. Research on genetic mechanism of IMF decomposition has positive meaning to pork quality and diseases such as obesity and type 2 diabetes treatment. In this study, an IMF trait segregation population was used to perform RNA sequencing and to analyze the joint or independent effects of genes and long intergenic non-coding RNAs (lincRNAs) on IMF.ResultsInteresting, one lincRNA gene, namedIMF related LincRNA (IRLnc) not only has a 292-nt conserved region in 100 vertebrates but also has conserved up and down stream genes (<10 kb)in pig and humans. Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) validation study indicated thatnuclear receptor subfamily 4 group A member 3 (NR4A3) which located at the downstream of IRLnchas similar expression pattern with IRLnc. RNAi-mediated loss of function screens identified that IRLnc silencing could inhibit both of the RNA and protein expression of NR4A3. And the in-situ hybridization co-expression experiment indicates that IRLnc may directly binding to NR4A3. As the NR4A3 could regulate the catecholamine catabolism, which could affect insulin sensitivity, we inferred that IRLncinfluence IMF decomposition by regulating the expression of NR4A3.ConclusionsIn conclusion, a novel functional noncoding variation named IRLnc have been found contribute to IMF. These finding suggest novel mechanistic approach for treatment of insulin resistance in human beings and meat quality improvement in animal.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Getiria Onsongo ◽  
Ham Ching Lam ◽  
Matthew Bower ◽  
Bharat Thyagarajan

Abstract Objective : Detection of small copy number variations (CNVs) in clinically relevant genes is routinely being used to aid diagnosis. We recently developed a tool, CNV-RF , capable of detecting small clinically relevant CNVs. CNV-RF was designed for small gene panels and did not scale well to large gene panels. On large gene panels, CNV-RF routinely failed due to memory limitations. When successful, it took about 2 days to complete a single analysis, making it impractical for routinely analyzing large gene panels. We need a reliable tool capable of detecting CNVs in the clinic that scales well to large gene panels. Results : We have developed Hadoop-CNV-RF, a scalable implementation of CNV-RF . Hadoop-CNV-RF is a freely available tool capable of rapidly analyzing large gene panels. It takes advantage of Hadoop, a big data framework developed to analyze large amounts of data. Preliminary results show it reduces analysis time from about 2 days to less than 4 hours and can seamlessly scale to large gene panels. Hadoop-CNV-RF has been clinically validated for targeted capture data and is currently being used in a CLIA molecular diagnostics laboratory. Its availability and usage instructions are publicly available at: https://github.com/getiria-onsongo/hadoop-cnvrf-public .


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 332 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chia-Shan Hsieh ◽  
Pang-Shuo Huang ◽  
Sheng-Nan Chang ◽  
Cho-Kai Wu ◽  
Juey-Jen Hwang ◽  
...  

Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a common cardiac arrhythmia and is one of the major causes of ischemic stroke. In addition to the clinical factors such as CHADS2 or CHADS2-VASC score, the impact of genetic factors on the risk of thromboembolic stroke in patients with AF has been largely unknown. Single-nucleotide polymorphisms in several genomic regions have been found to be associated with AF. However, these loci do not contribute to all the genetic risks of AF or AF related thromboembolic risks, suggesting that there are other genetic factors or variants not yet discovered. In the human genome, copy number variations (CNVs) could also contribute to disease susceptibility. In the present study, we sought to identify CNVs determining the AF-related thromboembolic risk. Using a genome-wide approach in 109 patients with AF and thromboembolic stroke and 14,666 controls from the Taiwanese general population (Taiwan Biobank), we first identified deletions in chromosomal regions 1p36.32-1p36.33, 5p15.33, 8q24.3 and 19p13.3 and amplifications in 14q11.2 that were significantly associated with AF-related stroke in the Taiwanese population. In these regions, 148 genes were involved, including several microRNAs and long non-recoding RNAs. Using a pathway analysis, we found deletions in GNB1, PRKCZ, and GNG7 genes related to the alpha-adrenergic receptor signaling pathway that play a major role in determining the risk of an AF-related stroke. In conclusion, CNVs may be genetic predictors of a risk of a thromboembolic stroke for patients with AF, possibly pointing to an impaired alpha-adrenergic signaling pathway in the mechanism of AF-related thromboembolism.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 233-233
Author(s):  
Cai Chen ◽  
Christoph Bartenhagen ◽  
Michael Gombert ◽  
Vera Okpanyi ◽  
Vera Binder ◽  
...  

Abstract High hyperdiploid acute lymphoblastic leukemia (HeH-ALL) is characterized by 51-67 chromosomes and nonrandom gains of specific chromosomes (X, 4, 6, 10, 14, 17, 18, and 21). It presents the most frequent numerical cytogenetic alteration in childhood pre B-cell ALL occurring in 25-30% of cases. Recurrent disease will affect 15-20%. Pre-leukemic HeH clones are generated in utero, but cooperating oncogenic lesions are necessary for overt leukemia and remain to be determined. Recently, a phenomenon termed chromothripsis has been described in which massive structural variations occur in a single aberrant mitosis. Whole or partial chromosomes are shattered and some fragments are lost in the process of rejoining. Thus, characteristically, chromosomal copy numbers oscillate between two copy number states. Chromothripsis has been suggested to be a tumor-driving alteration that may be present in 2-3% of all human cancers. Its role as a potential cooperating or initiating lesion in HeH-ALL has not been determined. We applied state-of-the-art whole-genome next-generation-sequencing to analyze structural variations in six pediatric patients with recurrent HeH-ALL. Matched sample sets taken at diagnosis, remission and/or relapse were compared. Paired end sequencing was carried out on a Genome Analyzer IIx or a HiSeq 2000 (Illumina), respectively. Reads were aligned against the human reference genome (GRCh37) using BWA. Translocations were detected by GASV. Copy number variations were analyzed by FREEC. Structural variations were validated by PCR/Sanger sequencing and FISH. Of the six patients analyzed, five harbored on average one interchromosomal translocation or intrachromosomal inversion, but one patient presented with massive genomic rearrangements (Figure). These affected chromosome 3, 11, 12 and 20. Ten copy number shifts on chromosome 3 oscillating between two copy number states (2 and 3) indicated that these rearrangements were caused by chromothripsis. Breakpoint sequencing revealed that one of the identified translocations (t(12;20)(p13.1;p12.3)), was indeed a three-loci-rearrangement composed of small fragments derived from chromosomes 3, 12 and 20. Characteristically for chromothripsis, the breakpoints clustered closely. Three breakpoints separated by 224 bp and 64 kb were located in the transducin (beta)-like X-linked receptor 1 (TBL1XR1) gene. Other genes repeatedly targeted included the MACRO domain-containing protein 2 (MACROD2) gene (a deacetylase involved in deacetylation of lysine residues in histones and other proteins), the KIAA1467 gene (a transmembrane protein of the integrin alpha FG-GAP repeat containing 3 (ITFG3) family), and a novel regulatory lincRNA (ENSG00000243276). MACROD2 was previously observed as a target of chromothripsis in a colorectal carcinoma. Thus, the characterized breakpoints may identify fragile genomic sites prone to chromothriptic rearrangement. DNA repair was effectuated by non-homologous-end-joining as typical addition of non-template nucleotides with microhomologies of two to four nucleotides at the breakpoints demonstrated. Copy number profiles of this patient showed that at least two distinct leukemic clones could be identified at diagnosis. One had acquired chromothriptic alterations and presented the dominant clone at relapse indicating chemotherapy resistance and tumor-driving potential. Prior whole-exome sequencing did not reveal mutations in known oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes. Therefore, loss of function or expression of genes affected by chromosomal rearrangements, such as TBL1XR1 that is recurrently mutated in childhood ALL with ETV6-RUNX1 translocation, may account for the tumor-driving effect. All leukemic cells at diagnosis showed conformity concerning number and pattern of whole chromosome gains demonstrating that chromothripsis was not an initiating oncogenic event, but occurred secondary to high hyperdiploidy. Further aberrations (t(4;7), loss of 4q) were gained by the chromothriptic clone and could be detected by FISH in minor subclones pointing at ongoing clonal evolution. Taken together, our study reveals chromothripsis as a novel assisting and tumor-driving lesion in HeH ALL. Chromothripsis in HeH-ALL. Copy number variations and translocations at diagnosis (left) and relapse (right). (magenta: chromothriptic translocations; green: other translocations) Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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