中国科学院机构知识库网格
Chinese Academy of Sciences Institutional Repositories Grid
Molecular microevolution and epigenetic patterns of the long non-coding gene H19 show its potential function in pig domestication and breed divergence

文献类型:期刊论文

作者Li CC1; Wang X2,3; Cai HM4,5; Fu YH1; Luan Y1; Wang W2,3; Xiang H[*]2,3,6; Li CC[*]1
刊名BMC EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
出版日期2016
卷号16期号:X页码:e87
关键词Breed divergence Domestication H19 Long non-coding gene Methylation Molecular evolution Pig
通讯作者xiangh@mail.kiz.ac.cn ; lichangchun@mail.hzau.edu.cn
英文摘要

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

The domestic pig Sus scrofa domesticus originated from the wild boar S. scrofa about 10,000 years ago. During domestication, drastic morphological, physiological, and behavioral changes developed between domestic pigs and wild boars through artificial and natural selection. The long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) H19, which is located within the imprinting gene cluster H19-IGF2, plays an important role in regulating muscle development in humans and mice. This study systematically analyzed the molecular evolution of H19 and its possible epigenetic changes during pig domestication and breeding to explore the genetic and epigenetic contributions of H19 to pig domestication.

RESULTS:

The molecular evolution of H19 was initially analyzed on a large phylogenetic scale. Results showed that the gene was highly conserved within a broad range, especially in the 5' terminal sequence. The molecular evolution of the gene was then analyzed using published re-sequencing data of 30 wild boars from Tibet, 3 wild boars from Sichuan, and 15 native pigs from other regions in China. Eight polymorphic sites were identified, and the nucleotide diversity (π) value within the H19 gene body was significantly higher (Z-test, P < 0.05) in domesticated pigs than in wild pigs. However, no significant divergence occurred between domesticated and wild pigs. Single nucleotide polymorphisms in the 3' terminal sequence were surveyed in other Chinese local breeds and foreign pig breeds. We observed a consistently higher diversity in domesticated pigs than in wild pigs. The methylation pattern of the H19 gene in pigs was subsequently analyzed using published methylated DNA immunoprecipitation data and an unpublished single-base resolution liver methylome. Analysis results showed distinct methylation levels in some tissues. Among the samples surveyed, Landrace showed the lowest methylation level, followed by the Guizhou wild boar, whereas the Enshi pig exhibited the highest methylation level in the 2 kb upstream region of the H19 gene. Liver transcriptome data suggested that Landrace harbored the highest expression of the H19 gene, followed by the Guizhou wild boar, whereas the Enshi pig harbored the lowest expression of the gene. Differential methylation sites (DMSs) among the three breeds were mainly identified in the 2 kb upstream region of the H19 gene. In the Enshi pig, we detected allele-specific methylation (ASM) regions in the 2 kb upstream region of the H19 gene. Most of the DMSs in the upstream 2 kb region of the gene were also located in the ASM region in this breed.

CONCLUSIONS:

Molecular analyses suggest that the H19 gene was highly conserved during large-scale evolution and exhibited genotype differentiation during domestication and breed differentiation. The drastic diversity pattern between domestic and wild pigs in the H19 gene body, which was highly conserved during large-scale evolution, suggests that this gene might have played roles in the breed differentiation of domestic pigs. Methylation analysis indicates an opposite epigenetic regulation direction between Chinese and European pig (EU) domestication, which resulted in opposite expression changes in this gene between the two domesticated groups. Our preliminary analyses on DMSs among different pig breeds and ASM imply that imprinting was associated with methylation differences. This study systematically demonstrates the genetic and epigenetic patterns of H19 during pig domestication and provide valuable cues and basis for further research on the function of H19 in pig domestication.


资助信息The work was supported by the Research Project of Chinese Ministry of Education (113048A), a 973 program (2013CB835205), the Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars of Hubei Province of China (2014CFA024) and the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central University (2662015PY096).
收录类别SCI
语种英语
源URL[http://159.226.149.26:8080/handle/152453/9751]  
专题昆明动物研究所_基因起源组
昆明动物研究所_遗传资源与进化国家重点实验室
作者单位1.Key Lab of Agriculture Animal Genetics, Breeding, and Reproduction of Ministry of Education, College of Animal Science and Technology, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan 430070, People’s Republic of China
2.State Key Laboratory of Genetic Resources and Evolution, Kunming Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 32 East Jiaochang Road, Kunming, Yunnan Province 65022, China
3.Graduate School of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
4.Department of Computer Science, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong 999077, China
5.BGI Co Ltd, Shenzhen 518083, China
6.South China Normal University, Guangzhou 510631, China
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Li CC,Wang X,Cai HM,et al. Molecular microevolution and epigenetic patterns of the long non-coding gene H19 show its potential function in pig domestication and breed divergence[J]. BMC EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY,2016,16(X):e87.
APA Li CC.,Wang X.,Cai HM.,Fu YH.,Luan Y.,...&Li CC[*].(2016).Molecular microevolution and epigenetic patterns of the long non-coding gene H19 show its potential function in pig domestication and breed divergence.BMC EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY,16(X),e87.
MLA Li CC,et al."Molecular microevolution and epigenetic patterns of the long non-coding gene H19 show its potential function in pig domestication and breed divergence".BMC EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY 16.X(2016):e87.

入库方式: OAI收割

来源:昆明动物研究所

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