Identification of mRNA Degradome Variation Dependent on Divergent Muscle Mass in Different Pig Breeds

Author:

Piórkowska Katarzyna L.1,Szmatoła Tomasz12,Pawlina-Tyszko Klaudia1,Gurgul Artur12,Żak Grzegorz3,Ropka-Molik Katarzyna M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Animal Molecular Biology , National Research Institute of Animal Production , 32-083 Balice n. Kraków , Poland

2. University Centre of Veterinary Medicine, University of Agriculture in Krakow , Al. Mickiewicza 24/28, 30-059 Kraków , Poland

3. Department of Pig Breeding , National Research Institute of Animal Production , 32-083 Balice n. Kraków , Poland

Abstract

Abstract The search is still on for the molecular processes associated with the development and metabolism of skeletal muscles. Selection conducted in farm animals is focused on high muscle mass because it delivers higher economic profit. The present study aimed to shed light on mRNA degradome signals that could be characteristic for molecular processes associated with an abundance of muscle mass and to identify miRNA regulatory networks controlling these processes in pigs applying next-generation-sequencing (NGS). In the study, over 10,000 degraded transcripts were identified per sample, with the highest abundance for genes encoding mitochondrial proteins (COXs, NDs, CYTB, ATP6 and ATP8). Moreover, only 26% of the miRNA targets were found within this degraded transcript pool, which suggested for miRNAs other molecular mechanism at different level of gene expression than mRNA degradation. On the other hand, a small share of the identified degraded transcripts associated with miRNA regulation suggests a different mechanism of mRNA degradation for identified degraded transcropts. Subsequently, most of the miRNA gene degraded targets, such as ENO3, CKM, CRYAB and ADAM19 encode proteins involved in the muscle mass control. The present study showed an interesting dependence between miRNAs and their targets. Nevertheless, the complete view of the miRNA regulatory network could be a subject of further advanced research, which would employ a miRNA transfection procedure in skeletal muscle cell cultures.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

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