Assessing the effect of the CLPG mutation on the microRNA catalog of skeletal muscle using high-throughput sequencing (original) (raw)
- Carole Charlier1,
- Tracy Hadfield2,
- Noelle Cockett2,
- Michel Georges1,3 and
- Denis Baurain1
- 1 Unit of Animal Genomics, Department of Animal Production, GIGA-R, and Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Liège (B34), 4000-Liège, Belgium;
- 2 Department of Animal, Dairy and Veterinary Sciences, Utah State University, Logan, Utah 84322, USA
Abstract
The callipyge phenotype is a monogenic muscular hypertrophy that is only expressed in heterozygous sheep receiving the CLPG mutation from their sire. The wild-type phenotype of CLPG/CLPG animals is thought to result from translational inhibition of paternally expressed DLK1 transcripts by maternally expressed miRNAs. To identify the miRNA responsible for this trans effect, we used high-throughput sequencing to exhaustively catalog miRNAs expressed in skeletal muscle of sheep of the four_CLPG_ genotypes. We have identified 747 miRNA species of which 110 map to the DLK1–GTL2 or callipyge domain. We demonstrate that the latter are imprinted and preferentially expressed from the maternal allele. We show that the CLPG mutation affects their level of expression in cis (∼3.2-fold increase) as well as in trans (∼1.8-fold increase). In CLPG/CLPG animals, miRNAs from the DLK1–GTL2 domain account for ∼20% of miRNAs in skeletal muscle. We show that the CLPG genotype affects the levels of A-to-I editing of at least five pri-miRNAs of the DLK1–GTL2 domain, but that levels of editing of mature miRNAs are always minor. We present suggestive evidence that the miRNAs from the domain target the ORF of DLK1, thereby causing the trans inhibition underlying polar overdominance. We highlight the limitations of high-throughput sequencing for digital gene expression profiling as a result of biased and inconsistent amplification of specific miRNAs.
Footnotes
↵3 Corresponding author.
E-mail michel.georges{at}ulg.ac.be; fax 32-4-366-41-98.[Supplemental material is available online at http://www.genome.org. The sequence and miRNA expression data from this study have been submitted to NCBI's GenBank (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genbank/) and Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO; http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/) under accession nos. AF354168 and GSE24146, respectively. All new ovine miRNAs corresponding to the DLK1–GTL2 locus also have been submitted to miRBase (http://www.mirbase.org).]
Article published online before print. Article and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.108787.110.
Received April 6, 2010.
Accepted October 8, 2010.
Copyright © 2010 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press