Combining multi-OMICs information to identify key-regulator genes for pleiotropic effect on fertility and production traits in beef cattle.

The identification of biological processes related to the regulation of complex traits is a difficult task. Commonly, complex traits are regulated through a multitude of genes contributing each to a small part of the total genetic variance. Additionally, some loci can simultaneously regulate several...

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Main Authors: Pablo Augusto de Souza Fonseca, Samir Id-Lahoucine, Antonio Reverter, Juan F Medrano, Marina S Fortes, Joaquim Casellas, Filippo Miglior, Luiz Brito, Maria Raquel S Carvalho, Flávio S Schenkel, Loan T Nguyen, Laercio R Porto-Neto, Milton G Thomas, Angela Cánovas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6193631?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-5c5e2d910f2e49ef91e7bb1770e81d622020-11-25T01:56:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-011310e020529510.1371/journal.pone.0205295Combining multi-OMICs information to identify key-regulator genes for pleiotropic effect on fertility and production traits in beef cattle.Pablo Augusto de Souza FonsecaSamir Id-LahoucineAntonio ReverterJuan F MedranoMarina S FortesJoaquim CasellasFilippo MigliorLuiz BritoMaria Raquel S CarvalhoFlávio S SchenkelLoan T NguyenLaercio R Porto-NetoMilton G ThomasAngela CánovasThe identification of biological processes related to the regulation of complex traits is a difficult task. Commonly, complex traits are regulated through a multitude of genes contributing each to a small part of the total genetic variance. Additionally, some loci can simultaneously regulate several complex traits, a phenomenon defined as pleiotropy. The lack of understanding on the biological processes responsible for the regulation of these traits results in the decrease of selection efficiency and the selection of undesirable hitchhiking effects. The identification of pleiotropic key-regulator genes can assist in developing important tools for investigating biological processes underlying complex traits. A multi-breed and multi-OMICs approach was applied to study the pleiotropic effects of key-regulator genes using three independent beef cattle populations evaluated for fertility traits. A pleiotropic map for 32 traits related to growth, feed efficiency, carcass and meat quality, and reproduction was used to identify genes shared among the different populations and breeds in pleiotropic regions. Furthermore, data-mining analyses were performed using the Cattle QTL database (CattleQTLdb) to identify the QTL category annotated in the regions around the genes shared among breeds. This approach allowed the identification of a main gene network (composed of 38 genes) shared among breeds. This gene network was significantly associated with thyroid activity, among other biological processes, and displayed a high regulatory potential. In addition, it was possible to identify genes with pleiotropic effects related to crucial biological processes that regulate economically relevant traits associated with fertility, production and health, such as MYC, PPARG, GSK3B, TG and IYD genes. These genes will be further investigated to better understand the biological processes involved in the expression of complex traits and assist in the identification of functional variants associated with undesirable phenotypes, such as decreased fertility, poor feed efficiency and negative energetic balance.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6193631?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pablo Augusto de Souza Fonseca
Samir Id-Lahoucine
Antonio Reverter
Juan F Medrano
Marina S Fortes
Joaquim Casellas
Filippo Miglior
Luiz Brito
Maria Raquel S Carvalho
Flávio S Schenkel
Loan T Nguyen
Laercio R Porto-Neto
Milton G Thomas
Angela Cánovas
spellingShingle Pablo Augusto de Souza Fonseca
Samir Id-Lahoucine
Antonio Reverter
Juan F Medrano
Marina S Fortes
Joaquim Casellas
Filippo Miglior
Luiz Brito
Maria Raquel S Carvalho
Flávio S Schenkel
Loan T Nguyen
Laercio R Porto-Neto
Milton G Thomas
Angela Cánovas
Combining multi-OMICs information to identify key-regulator genes for pleiotropic effect on fertility and production traits in beef cattle.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Pablo Augusto de Souza Fonseca
Samir Id-Lahoucine
Antonio Reverter
Juan F Medrano
Marina S Fortes
Joaquim Casellas
Filippo Miglior
Luiz Brito
Maria Raquel S Carvalho
Flávio S Schenkel
Loan T Nguyen
Laercio R Porto-Neto
Milton G Thomas
Angela Cánovas
author_sort Pablo Augusto de Souza Fonseca
title Combining multi-OMICs information to identify key-regulator genes for pleiotropic effect on fertility and production traits in beef cattle.
title_short Combining multi-OMICs information to identify key-regulator genes for pleiotropic effect on fertility and production traits in beef cattle.
title_full Combining multi-OMICs information to identify key-regulator genes for pleiotropic effect on fertility and production traits in beef cattle.
title_fullStr Combining multi-OMICs information to identify key-regulator genes for pleiotropic effect on fertility and production traits in beef cattle.
title_full_unstemmed Combining multi-OMICs information to identify key-regulator genes for pleiotropic effect on fertility and production traits in beef cattle.
title_sort combining multi-omics information to identify key-regulator genes for pleiotropic effect on fertility and production traits in beef cattle.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description The identification of biological processes related to the regulation of complex traits is a difficult task. Commonly, complex traits are regulated through a multitude of genes contributing each to a small part of the total genetic variance. Additionally, some loci can simultaneously regulate several complex traits, a phenomenon defined as pleiotropy. The lack of understanding on the biological processes responsible for the regulation of these traits results in the decrease of selection efficiency and the selection of undesirable hitchhiking effects. The identification of pleiotropic key-regulator genes can assist in developing important tools for investigating biological processes underlying complex traits. A multi-breed and multi-OMICs approach was applied to study the pleiotropic effects of key-regulator genes using three independent beef cattle populations evaluated for fertility traits. A pleiotropic map for 32 traits related to growth, feed efficiency, carcass and meat quality, and reproduction was used to identify genes shared among the different populations and breeds in pleiotropic regions. Furthermore, data-mining analyses were performed using the Cattle QTL database (CattleQTLdb) to identify the QTL category annotated in the regions around the genes shared among breeds. This approach allowed the identification of a main gene network (composed of 38 genes) shared among breeds. This gene network was significantly associated with thyroid activity, among other biological processes, and displayed a high regulatory potential. In addition, it was possible to identify genes with pleiotropic effects related to crucial biological processes that regulate economically relevant traits associated with fertility, production and health, such as MYC, PPARG, GSK3B, TG and IYD genes. These genes will be further investigated to better understand the biological processes involved in the expression of complex traits and assist in the identification of functional variants associated with undesirable phenotypes, such as decreased fertility, poor feed efficiency and negative energetic balance.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6193631?pdf=render
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