Segregation of regulatory polymorphisms with effects on the gluteus medius transcriptome in a purebred pig population

Autor/a

Cánovas Tienda, Angela

Pena i Subirà, Ramona Natacha

Gallardo García, David

Ramírez Bellido, Óscar

Amills i Eras, Marcel

Quintanilla Aguado, Raquel

Data de publicació

2012-12-13T12:27:03Z

2012-12-13T12:27:03Z

2012



Resum

Background: The main goal of the present study was to analyse the genetic architecture of mRNA expression in muscle, a tissue with an outmost economic importance for pig breeders. Previous studies have used F2 crosses to detect porcine expression QTL (eQTL), so they contributed with data that mostly represents the between-breed component of eQTL variation. Herewith, we have analysed eQTL segregation in an outbred Duroc population using two groups of animals with divergent fatness profiles. This approach is particularly suitable to analyse the within-breed component of eQTL variation, with a special emphasis on loci involved in lipid metabolism. Methodology/Principal Findings: GeneChip Porcine Genome arrays (Affymetrix) were used to determine the mRNA expression levels of gluteus medius samples from 105 Duroc barrows. A whole-genome eQTL scan was carried out with a panel of 116 microsatellites. Results allowed us to detect 613 genome-wide significant eQTL unevenly distributed across the pig genome. A clear predominance of trans- over cis-eQTL, was observed. Moreover, 11 trans-regulatory hotspots affecting the expression levels of four to 16 genes were identified. A Gene Ontology study showed that regulatory polymorphisms affected the expression of muscle development and lipid metabolism genes. A number of positional concordances between eQTL and lipid trait QTL were also found, whereas limited evidence of a linear relationship between muscle fat deposition and mRNA levels of eQTL regulated genes was obtained. Conclusions/Significance: Our data provide substantial evidence that there is a remarkable amount of within-breed genetic variation affecting muscle mRNA expression. Most of this variation acts in trans and influences biological processes related with muscle development, lipid deposition and energy balance. The identification of the underlying causal mutations and the ascertainment of their effects on phenotypes would allow gaining a fundamental perspective about how complex traits are built at the molecular level.

Tipus de document

article
publishedVersion

Llengua

Anglès

Matèries i paraules clau

Porcs -- Genètica; RNA

Publicat per

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Documents relacionats

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0035583

PLoS ONE, 2012, vol. 7, núm. 4, e35583

Drets

cc-by, (c) Cánovas et al., 2012

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/es/deed.ca

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