The landscape of allelic expression and DNA methylation at the bovine SGCE/PEG10 locus.
Yinjiao ZhangCui ZhangWeina ChenHaonan HuoShujing LiWenli YuLanjie JinKun WangShijie LiPublished in: Animal genetics (2024)
Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic regulation in mammals in which a small subset of genes is monoallelically expressed dependent on their parental origin. A large imprinted domain, SGCE/PEG10 locus, is located on human chromosome 7q21s and mouse proximal chromosome 6. However, genomic imprinting of bovine SGCE/PEG10 cluster has not been systematically studied. In this study, we investigated allele expression of 14 genes of the SGCE/PEG10 locus in bovine somatic tissues and term placenta using a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based sequencing method. In addition to SGCE and PEG10, two conserved paternally expressed genes in human and mice, five other genes (TFPI2, GNG11, ASB4, PON1, and PON3) were paternally expressed. Three genes, BET1, COL1A2, and CASD1, exhibited tissue-specific monoallelic expression. CALCR showed monoallelic expression in tissues but biallelic expression in the placenta. Three genes, GNGT1, PPP1R9A, and PON2, showed biallelic expression in cattle. Five differentially methylated regions (DMRs) were found to be associated with the allelic expression of TFPI2, COL1A2, SGCE/PEG10, PON3, and ASB4 genes, respectively. The SGCE/PEG10 DMR is a maternally hypermethylated germline DMR, but TFPI2, COL1A2, PON3, and ASB4 DMRs are secondary DMRs. In summary, we identified five novel bovine imprinted genes (GNG11, BET1, COL1A2, CASD1, and PON1) and four secondary DMRs at the SGCE/PEG10 locus.
Keyphrases
- poor prognosis
- genome wide
- dna methylation
- drug delivery
- bioinformatics analysis
- copy number
- genome wide identification
- gene expression
- long non coding rna
- type diabetes
- dna damage
- metabolic syndrome
- genome wide analysis
- insulin resistance
- skeletal muscle
- oxidative stress
- preterm infants
- dna repair
- liquid chromatography
- single molecule
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- solid state