De Novo Transcriptome Dataset Generation of the Swamp Buffalo Brain and Non-Brain Tissues

Author:

Xiaobo Wang12ORCID,Hassan Faiz-ul3ORCID,Liu Sheng2ORCID,Yang Shuli2ORCID,Ahmad Muhammad4ORCID,Ahmed Ishtiaq5ORCID,Huang Kongwei1,Iqbal Hafiz M. N.6ORCID,Yu Hui2ORCID,Liu Qingyou12ORCID,Rehman Saif ur12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory for Conservation and Utilization of Subtropical Agro-Bioresources, Guangxi University, Nanning 530005, China

2. Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Animal Molecular Design and Precise Breeding, School of Life Science and Engineering, Foshan University, Foshan 528225, China

3. Institute of Animal and Dairy Sciences, Faculty of Animal Husbandry, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad 38040, Pakistan

4. Faculty of Veterinary Sciences, Shaheed Benazir Bhutto University of Veterinary and Animal Sciences (SBBUVAS), Sakrand 67210, Pakistan

5. Department of Regional Science Operations, La Trobe Rural Health School, Albury-Wodonga, Victoria 3690, Australia

6. Tecnológico de Monterrey, School of Engineering and Sciences, Monterrey 64849, Mexico

Abstract

The sequenced data availability opened new horizons related to buffalo genetic control of economic traits and genomic diversity. The visceral organs (brain, liver, etc.) significantly involved in energy metabolism, docility, or social interactions. We performed swamp buffalo transcriptomic profiling of 24 different tissues (brain and non-brain) to identify novel transcripts and analyzed the differentially expressed genes (DEGs) of brain vs. non-brain tissues with their functional annotation. We obtained 178.57 Gb clean transcriptomic data with GC contents 52.77%, reference genome alignment 95.36%, exonic coverage 88.49%. Totally, 26363 mRNAs transcripts including 5574 novel genes were obtained. Further, 7194 transcripts were detected as DEGs by comparing brain vs. non-brain tissues group, of which 3,999 were upregulated and 3,195 downregulated. These DEGs were functionally associated with cellular metabolic activities, signal transduction, cytoprotection, and structural and binding activities. The related functional pathways included cancer pathway, PI3k-Akt signaling, axon guidance, JAK-STAT signaling, basic cellular metabolism, thermogenesis, and oxidative phosphorylation. Our study provides an in-depth understanding of swamp buffalo transcriptomic data including DEGs potentially involved in basic cellular activities and development that helped to maintain their working capacity and social interaction with humans, and also, helpful to disclose the genetic architecture of different phenotypic traits and their gene expression regulation.

Funder

Guangxi University Postdoctorate Fellowship Research Grant

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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