Genome-Wide microRNA Binding Site Variation between Extinct Wild Aurochs and Modern Cattle Identifies Candidate microRNA-Regulated Domestication Genes
Author
Braud, MartinMagee, David A.
Park, Stephen D. E.
Sonstegard, Tad S.
Waters, Sinead M.
MacHugh, David E.
Spillane, Charles
Date
2017-01-31
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Braud M, Magee DA, Park SDE, Sonstegard TS, Waters SM, MacHugh DE and Spillane C (2017) Genome-Wide microRNA Binding Site Variation between Extinct Wild Aurochs and Modern Cattle Identifies Candidate microRNA-Regulated Domestication Genes. Frontiers in Genetics. 8:3. doi: http::/dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2017.00003Abstract
The domestication of cattle from the now-extinct wild aurochs (Bos primigenius) involved selection for physiological and behavioral traits, with underlying genetic factors that remain largely unknown. Non-coding microRNAs have emerged as key regulators of the spatio-temporal expression of target genes controlling mammalian growth and development, including in livestock species. During the domestication process, selection of mutational changes in miRNAs and/or miRNA binding sites could have provided a mechanism to generate some of the traits that differentiate domesticated cattle from wild aurochs. To investigate this, we analyzed the open reading frame DNA sequence of 19,994 orthologous protein-coding gene pairs from extant Bos taurus genomes and a single extinct B. primigenius genome. We identified miRNA binding site polymorphisms in the 3′ UTRs of 1,620 of these orthologous genes. These 1,620 genes with altered miRNA binding sites between the B. taurus and B. primigenius lineages represent candidate domestication genes. Using a novel Score Site ratio metric we have ranked these miRNA-regulated genes according to the extent of divergence between miRNA binding site presence, frequency and copy number between the orthologous genes from B. taurus and B. primigenius. This provides an unbiased approach to identify cattle genes that have undergone the most changes in miRNA binding (i.e., regulation) between the wild aurochs and modern-day cattle breeds. In addition, we demonstrate that these 1,620 candidate domestication genes are enriched for roles in pigmentation, fertility, neurobiology, metabolism, immunity and production traits (including milk quality and feed efficiency). Our findings suggest that directional selection of miRNA regulatory variants was important in the domestication and subsequent artificial selection that gave rise to modern taurine cattle.Funder
Teagasc Walsh Fellowship Programme; Science Foundation Ireland; Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine; European UnionGrant Number
2010062; SFI/08/IN.1/B2038; SFI/13/IA/1820; RSF 06 406; KBBE-211602-MACROSYSae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
https://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2017.00003
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