4.7 Article

Genome-Wide Profiling of the Microrna Transcriptome Regulatory Network to Identify Putative Candidate Genes Associated with Backfat Deposition in Pigs

Journal

ANIMALS
Volume 9, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani9060313

Keywords

backfat deposition; candidate gene; expression profile; pig; regulatory network

Funding

  1. Beijing Natural Science Foundation [6174047]
  2. Agricultural Science and Technology Innovation Project [ASTIP-IAS02]
  3. Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences Foundation [2015ywf-zd-9]

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Simple Summary Backfat thickness is an important characteristic in pig breeding. In this study, the key microRNAs (miRNAs) and genes associated with pig backfat deposition were detected and characterized using RNA sequencing between adipose tissues of high-backfat and low-backfat pigs. Strong candidate mRNAmiRNA interaction pairs were identified to affect backfat deposition through the regulation of target genes by miRNAs. These results provide novel insights into the backfat deposition mechanism in pigs. Abstract Backfat deposition is strongly related to carcass traits, growth rate, feed conversion rate, and reproductive performance in pig production. To understand the molecular mechanisms underlying porcine backfat thickness phenotypes, transcriptome and miRNA profiling of backfat from high-backfat thickness and low-backfat thickness pigs were performed by RNA sequencing. Twenty genes encoding for miRNAs and 126 genes encoding for protein-coding genes were found to be differentially expressed between the two libraries. After integrative analysis of DEMs targets and DEGs, a total of 33 mRNAmiRNA interaction pairs were identified, and the regulatory networks of these pairs were determined. Among these genes, five (AQP9, DKK3, GLYCTK, GLIPR1, and DUSP2) related to fat deposition were found to be strong candidate genes, and mir-31-5p/AQP9 and mir-31-5p/GLIPR1 may play important roles in fat deposition. Additionally, potential adipogenesis-related genes and miRNAs were identified. These findings improve the current understanding of the molecular genetic mechanisms of subcutaneous fat deposition in pigs and provide a foundation for further studies.

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