scholarly journals RNA-Seq Data for Reliable SNP Detection and Genotype Calling: Interest for Coding Variant Characterization and Cis-Regulation Analysis by Allele-Specific Expression in Livestock Species

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frédéric Jehl ◽  
Fabien Degalez ◽  
Maria Bernard ◽  
Frédéric Lecerf ◽  
Laetitia Lagoutte ◽  
...  

In addition to their common usages to study gene expression, RNA-seq data accumulated over the last 10 years are a yet-unexploited resource of SNPs in numerous individuals from different populations. SNP detection by RNA-seq is particularly interesting for livestock species since whole genome sequencing is expensive and exome sequencing tools are unavailable. These SNPs detected in expressed regions can be used to characterize variants affecting protein functions, and to study cis-regulated genes by analyzing allele-specific expression (ASE) in the tissue of interest. However, gene expression can be highly variable, and filters for SNP detection using the popular GATK toolkit are not yet standardized, making SNP detection and genotype calling by RNA-seq a challenging endeavor. We compared SNP calling results using GATK suggested filters, on two chicken populations for which both RNA-seq and DNA-seq data were available for the same samples of the same tissue. We showed, in expressed regions, a RNA-seq precision of 91% (SNPs detected by RNA-seq and shared by DNA-seq) and we characterized the remaining 9% of SNPs. We then studied the genotype (GT) obtained by RNA-seq and the impact of two factors (GT call-rate and read number per GT) on the concordance of GT with DNA-seq; we proposed thresholds for them leading to a 95% concordance. Applying these thresholds to 767 multi-tissue RNA-seq of 382 birds of 11 chicken populations, we found 9.5 M SNPs in total, of which ∼550,000 SNPs per tissue and population with a reliable GT (call rate ≥ 50%) and among them, ∼340,000 with a MAF ≥ 10%. We showed that such RNA-seq data from one tissue can be used to (i) detect SNPs with a strong predicted impact on proteins, despite their scarcity in each population (16,307 SIFT deleterious missenses and 590 stop-gained), (ii) study, on a large scale, cis-regulations of gene expression, with ∼81% of protein-coding and 68% of long non-coding genes (TPM ≥ 1) that can be analyzed for ASE, and with ∼29% of them that were cis-regulated, and (iii) analyze population genetic using such SNPs located in expressed regions. This work shows that RNA-seq data can be used with good confidence to detect SNPs and associated GT within various populations and used them for different analyses as GTEx studies.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mazdak Salavati ◽  
Stephen J. Bush ◽  
Sergio Palma-Vera ◽  
Mary E. B. McCulloch ◽  
David A. Hume ◽  
...  

AbstractPervasive allelic variation at both gene and single nucleotide level (SNV) between individuals is commonly associated with complex traits in humans and animals. Allele-specific expression (ASE) analysis, using RNA-Seq, can provide a detailed annotation of allelic imbalance and infer the existence of cis-acting transcriptional regulation. However, variant detection in RNA-Seq data is compromised by biased mapping of reads to the reference DNA sequence. In this manuscript we describe an unbiased standardised computational pipeline for allele-specific expression analysis using RNA-Seq data, which we have adapted and developed using tools available under open licence. The analysis pipeline we present is designed to minimise reference bias while providing accurate profiling of allele-specific expression across tissues and cell types. Using this methodology, we were able to profile pervasive allelic imbalance across tissues and cell types, at both the gene and SNV level, in Texel x Scottish Blackface sheep, using the sheep gene expression atlas dataset. ASE profiles were pervasive in each sheep and across all tissue types investigated. However, ASE profiles shared across tissues were limited and instead they tended to be highly tissue-specific. These tissue-specific ASE profiles may underlie the expression of economically important traits and could be utilized as weighted SNVs, for example, to improve the accuracy of genomic selection in breeding programmes for sheep. An additional benefit of the pipeline is that it does not require parental genotypes and can therefore be applied to other RNA-Seq datasets for livestock, including those available on the Functional Annotation of Animal Genomes (FAANG) data portal. This study is the first global characterisation of moderate to extreme ASE in tissues and cell types from sheep. We have applied a robust methodology for ASE profiling, to provide both a novel analysis of the multi-dimensional sheep gene expression atlas dataset, and a foundation for identifying the regulatory and expressed elements of the genome that are driving complex traits in livestock.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Joseph Tomlinson ◽  
Shawn W. Polson ◽  
Jing Qiu ◽  
Juniper A. Lake ◽  
William Lee ◽  
...  

AbstractDifferential abundance of allelic transcripts in a diploid organism, commonly referred to as allele specific expression (ASE), is a biologically significant phenomenon and can be examined using single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from RNA-seq. Quantifying ASE aids in our ability to identify and understand cis-regulatory mechanisms that influence gene expression, and thereby assist in identifying causal mutations. This study examines ASE in breast muscle, abdominal fat, and liver of commercial broiler chickens using variants called from a large sub-set of the samples (n = 68). ASE analysis was performed using a custom software called VCF ASE Detection Tool (VADT), which detects ASE of biallelic SNPs using a binomial test. On average ~ 174,000 SNPs in each tissue passed our filtering criteria and were considered informative, of which ~ 24,000 (~ 14%) showed ASE. Of all ASE SNPs, only 3.7% exhibited ASE in all three tissues, with ~ 83% showing ASE specific to a single tissue. When ASE genes (genes containing ASE SNPs) were compared between tissues, the overlap among all three tissues increased to 20.1%. Our results indicate that ASE genes show tissue-specific enrichment patterns, but all three tissues showed enrichment for pathways involved in translation.


Genetics ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 195 (3) ◽  
pp. 1157-1166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandrine Lagarrigue ◽  
Lisa Martin ◽  
Farhad Hormozdiari ◽  
Pierre-François Roux ◽  
Calvin Pan ◽  
...  

Gene ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 641 ◽  
pp. 367-375 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Oczkowicz ◽  
Tomasz Szmatoła ◽  
Katarzyna Piórkowska ◽  
Katarzyna Ropka-Molik

2018 ◽  
Vol 34 (13) ◽  
pp. 2177-2184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Narayanan Raghupathy ◽  
Kwangbom Choi ◽  
Matthew J Vincent ◽  
Glen L Beane ◽  
Keith S Sheppard ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 151 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. P226-P226
Author(s):  
Maria K. L. Ho ◽  
Yehudit Hasin ◽  
Aldons J. Lusis ◽  
Rick A. Friedman

PLoS ONE ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. e0126911 ◽  
Author(s):  
David L. A. Wood ◽  
Katia Nones ◽  
Anita Steptoe ◽  
Angelika Christ ◽  
Ivon Harliwong ◽  
...  

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