| Literature DB >> 23587058 |
Xiaodong Fang1, Yulian Mou, Zhiyong Huang, Yong Li, Lijuan Han, Yanfeng Zhang, Yue Feng, Yuanxin Chen, Xuanting Jiang, Wei Zhao, Xiaoqing Sun, Zhiqiang Xiong, Lan Yang, Huan Liu, Dingding Fan, Likai Mao, Lijie Ren, Chuxin Liu, Juan Wang, Kui Li, Guangbiao Wang, Shulin Yang, Liangxue Lai, Guojie Zhang, Yingrui Li, Jun Wang, Lars Bolund, Huanming Yang, Jian Wang, Shutang Feng, Songgang Li, Yutao Du.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The pig is an economically important food source, amounting to approximately 40% of all meat consumed worldwide. Pigs also serve as an important model organism because of their similarity to humans at the anatomical, physiological and genetic level, making them very useful for studying a variety of human diseases. A pig strain of particular interest is the miniature pig, specifically the Wuzhishan pig (WZSP), as it has been extensively inbred. Its high level of homozygosity offers increased ease for selective breeding for specific traits and a more straightforward understanding of the genetic changes that underlie its biological characteristics. WZSP also serves as a promising means for applications in surgery, tissue engineering, and xenotransplantation. Here, we report the sequencing and analysis of an inbreeding WZSP genome.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23587058 PMCID: PMC3626506 DOI: 10.1186/2047-217X-1-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gigascience ISSN: 2047-217X Impact factor: 6.524
Global statistics of the pig genome
| | |||
| Pair end library | 170 ~ 800 bp | 149 | 55 |
| | 2 ~ 20 kb | 62 | 23 |
| | Total | 211 | 78 |
| | |||
| Contig | 23.5 | 230 | 2.57 |
| Scaffold | 5,432 | 21,409 | 2.64 |
| | |||
| Repeats | 4,172,488 | 1,008.6 | 38.2 |
| Genes | 20,326 | 597.3 | 22.6 |
| CDS | 181,843 | 31.2 | 1.2 |
CDS, Coding sequences.
Figure 1Heterozygosis distribution of WZSP, naked mole rat, inbred mouse at F280 and human using a 50 Kbp non-overlapping sliding window. WZSP and inbred mouse show a large amount of a low heterozygosis region (59.97% and 69.15% of the windows respectively for heterozygosis ratio < 0.01%).
Figure 2Divergence distribution of SINE/tRNA in the pig genome. (A) The divergence distribution of all SINE/tRNA, and (B) the divergence distribution of classified SINE/tRNA subfamilies.
Figure 3Estimation of divergence time. The time of divergence (with error range shown in parentheses) of pig and seven other mammals based on orthology relationships. Distances are shown in millions of years.
Figure 4PERVs in the WZSP genome. (A) Distribution of similarity between virus protein and its counterpart in WZSP genome by considering factors of sequence identity and coverage. (B) Structure of whole PERV genome inserted into the pig genome. The upper panel shows the sequencing depth of the assembled scaffold. The middle panel visualizes the paired-end alignment of the scaffold providing evidence of correct assembly. The bottom panel shows the genome structure of PERV and its integration site in the scaffold.