Allele-specific regulatory effects on the pig transcriptome

Author:

Lin Yu1ORCID,Li Jing12ORCID,Chen Li34ORCID,Bai Jingyi1ORCID,Zhang Jiaman1ORCID,Wang Yujie1ORCID,Liu Pengliang1ORCID,Long Keren2ORCID,Ge Liangpeng34ORCID,Jin Long2ORCID,Gu Yiren56ORCID,Li Mingzhou1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Livestock and Poultry Multi-omics Key Laboratory of Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, College of Animal Science and Technology, Sichuan Agricultural University , Chengdu 611130 , China

2. Animal Breeding and Genetics Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, Institute of Animal Genetics and Breeding, Sichuan Agricultural University , Chengdu 611130 , China

3. Pig Industry Sciences Key Laboratory of Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Chongqing Academy of Animal Sciences , Chongqing 402460 , China

4. National Center of Technology Innovation for Pigs , Chongqing 402460 , China

5. College of Animal and Veterinary Sciences, Southwest Minzu University , Chengdu 610041 , China

6. Animal Breeding and Genetics Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province , Sichuan Animal Science Academy, Chengdu 610066 , China

Abstract

Abstract Background Allele-specific expression (ASE) refers to the preferential expression of one allele over the other and contributes to adaptive phenotypic plasticity. Here, we used a reciprocal cross-model between phenotypically divergent European Berkshire and Asian Tibetan pigs to characterize 2 ASE classes: imprinting (i.e., the unequal expression between parental alleles) and sequence dependent (i.e., unequal expression between breed-specific alleles). We examined 3 transcript types, including protein-coding genes (PCGs), long noncoding RNAs, and transcripts of unknown coding potential, across 7 representative somatic tissues from hybrid pigs generated by reciprocal crosses. Results We identified a total of 92 putative imprinted transcripts, 69 (75.00%) of which are described here for the first time. By combining the transcriptome from purebred Berkshire and Tibetan pigs, we found ∼6.59% of PCGs are differentially expressed between breeds that are regulated by trans-elements (e.g., transcriptional factors), while only ∼1.35% are attributable to cis (e.g., promoters). The higher prevalence of trans-PCGs indicates the dominated effects of trans-regulation in driving expression differences and shaping adaptive phenotypic plasticity between breeds, which were supported by functional enrichment analysis. We also found strong evidence that expression changes mediated by cis-effects were associated with accumulated variants in promoters. Conclusions Our study provides a comprehensive map of expression regulation that constitutes a valuable resource for the agricultural improvement of pig breeds.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

Tackling Project for Agricultural Key Core Technologies of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Sichuan Science and Technology Program

Major Science and Technology Projects of Tibet Autonomous Region

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Computer Science Applications,Health Informatics

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