Animal Production Science | 2021

An integrated approach in gene-expression landscape profiling to identify housekeeping and tissue-specific genes in cattle

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


\nContext\nHigh-throughput transcriptome sequencing (RNA-Seq) has been widely applied in cattle studies. Public databases such as the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) contain large collections of gene expression data from various cattle tissues that can be used in gene expression analysis research\n\nAims\nThis study was conducted to investigate patterns of transcriptome variation across tissues of cattle through large-scale identification of housekeeping genes (i.e. those crucial to maintaining basic cellular activity) and tissue-specific genes in cattle tissues.\n\nMethods\nUsing data available in the NCBI Sequence Read Archive database, we analysed 1377 transcriptome data sequences from 60 bovine tissue types, identified tissue-specific and housekeeping genes, and set up a web-based bovine gene expression analysis tool.\n\nKey results\nWe found 101 genes widely expressed in almost all tissue and screened out five housekeeping genes: RPL35A, eIF4A2, GAPDH, IPO5 and PAK2. Focusing on 12 major organs, we found 861 genes specifically expressing in these tissues. Furthermore, 187 significantly differentially expressed genes were found among six types of muscle tissues. All expression data were made available at our new website http://cattleExp.org, which can be freely accessed for future gene expression analyses.\n\nConclusions\nThe housekeeping genes and tissue-specific genes identified will provide more information for researchers studying gene expression in cattle.\n\nImplications\nThe web-based cattle gene expression analysis tool will make it easy for researchers to access large public datasets. Users can easily access all publicly available RNA data and upload their own RNA-Seq data.\n\n

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1071/an20689
Language English
Journal Animal Production Science

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