PigBiobank: a valuable resource for understanding genetic and biological mechanisms of diverse complex traits in pigs

Autor/a

Zeng, Haonan

Zhang, Wenjing

Lin, Qing

Gao, Yahui

Teng, Jinyan

Xu, Zhiting

Cai, Xiaodian

Zhong, Zhanming

Wu, Jun

Liu, Yuqiang

Diao, Shuqi

Wei, Chen

Gong, Wentao

Pan, Xiangchun

Li, Zedong

Huang, Xiaoyu

Chen, Xifan

Du, Jinshi

The PigGTEx Consortium

Zhao, Fuping

Zhao, Yunxiang

Ballester, Maria

Crespo-Piazuelo, Daniel

Amills, Marcel

Clop, Alex

Karlskov-Mortensen, Peter

Fredholm, Merete

Li, Pinghua

Huang, Ruihua

Tang, Guoqing

Li, Mingzhou

Liu, Xiaohong

Chen, Yaosheng

Zhang, Qin

Li, Jiaqi

Yuan, Xiaolong

Ding, Xiangdong

Fang, Lingzhao

Zhang, Zhe

Data de publicació

2023-11-13



Resum

To fully unlock the potential of pigs as both agricultural species for animal-based protein food and biomedical models for human biology and disease, a comprehensive understanding of molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying various complex phenotypes in pigs and how the findings can be translated to other species, especially humans, are urgently needed. Here, within the Farm animal Genotype-Tissue Expression (FarmGTEx) project, we build the PigBiobank (http://pigbiobank.farmgtex.org) to systematically investigate the relationships among genomic variants, regulatory elements, genes, molecular networks, tissues and complex traits in pigs. This first version of the PigBiobank curates 71 885 pigs with both genotypes and phenotypes from over 100 pig breeds worldwide, covering 264 distinct complex traits. The PigBiobank has the following functions: (i) imputed sequence-based genotype-phenotype associations via a standardized and uniform pipeline, (ii) molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying trait-associations via integrating multi-omics data, (iii) cross-species gene mapping of complex traits via transcriptome-wide association studies, and (iv) high-quality results display and visualization. The PigBiobank will be updated timely with the development of the FarmGTEx-PigGTEx project, serving as an open-access and easy-to-use resource for genetically and biologically dissecting complex traits in pigs and translating the findings to other species.

Tipus de document

Article

Versió del document

Versió publicada

Llengua

Anglès

Matèries CDU

57 - Biologia

Pàgines

10

Publicat per

Oxford University Press

És versió de

Nucleic Acids Research

Drets

Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International

Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International

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