| Literature DB >> 24695583 |
Myung-Chul Kim1, Seung-Woo Lee2, Doug-Young Ryu3, Feng-Ji Cui1, Jong Bhak4, Yongbaek Kim5.
Abstract
The role of microRNAs (miRNAs) as a post-transcriptional gene regulator has been elucidated in a broad range of organisms including domestic animals. Characterization of miRNAs in normal tissues is an important step to investigate the functions of miRNAs in various physiological and pathological conditions. Using Illumina Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) technology, we identified a total of 292 known and 329 novel miRNAs in normal horse tissues including skeletal muscle, colon and liver. Distinct sets of miRNAs were differentially expressed in a tissue-specific manner. The miRNA genes were distributed across all the chromosomes except chromosomes 29 and 31 in the horse reference genome. In some chromosomes, multiple miRNAs were clustered and considered to be polycistronic transcript. A base composition analysis showed that equine miRNAs had a higher frequency of A+U than G+C. Furthermore, U tended to be more frequent at the 5' end of miRNA sequences. This is the first experimental study that identifies and characterizes the global miRNA expression profile in normal horse tissues. The present study enriches the horse miRNA database and provides useful information for further research dissecting biological functions of miRNAs in horse.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24695583 PMCID: PMC3973549 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0093662
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Length distribution and abundance of all miRNAs in horse muscle, colon, and liver tissues.
Approximately 83% of all sequences in horse tissues are concentrated in the 20–24 nt range. The most frequent length is 23 nt in all tissues.
Figure 2Venn diagram representing the distribution of known and novel miRNAs in horse muscle, colon, and liver tissues.
Counts in the Venn diagram are the number of miRNAs identified in each tissue. A total 292 known (A) and 329 novel miRNAs (B) are identified in horse tissues including muscle, colon, and liver.
Figure 3Length distribution of novel miRNAs in horse tissues.
miRNA sequences of all lengths are distributed in the 20–24 nt range. The most frequent length is 22 nt (34.65%) in horse miRNAs.
Figure 4Chromosomal locations of 292 known miRNA genes in horse.
Black vertical lines represent the miRNA gene, the depth of color represents the number of miRNA genes in this region. The relative locations of individual miRNAs across the 32 horse chromosomes are shown with the exception of chromosomes 29 and 31.
Figure 5Chromosomal locations of polycistronic miRNAs in horse.
Individual black horizontal lines represent polycistronic miRNA transcripts, the stars refer to multiple miRNA genes in this region. The relative locations of individual miRNAs that are considered as a polycistron are within 3
Polycistronic miRNAs in horse genome.
| Chr | Polycistronic miRNAs | Positions in chr |
|
| miR-200b, miR-200a, miR-429 | 48455071–48453091 |
|
| miR-30e, miR-30c | 17435650–17432816 |
|
| miR-95, miR-218 | 103550531–103550551 |
|
| miR-328, miR-138 | 9201088–9201162 |
|
| miR-29b, miR-29a | 85327107–85326792 |
|
| miR-183, miR-96 | 84472003–84471849 |
|
| miR-153-2, miR-101 | 95527968–95527988 |
|
| miR-205, miR-16, miR-15b | 15685339–15685252 |
|
| miR-141, miR-200c | 34423490–34423144 |
|
| miR-492-2, miR-708 | 54764367–54764389 |
|
| miR-492-2, miR-24, miR-27a, miR-23a | 44930206–44929889 |
|
| miR-100, miR-125b | 29500017–29500052 |
|
| miR-34c, miR-34b | 20101717–20101221 |
|
| miR-34b, miR-7-2 | 2932730–2932799 |
|
| miR-133a, miR-1 | 39912260–39912288 |
|
| miR-130b, miR-301b | 3383110–3382875 |
|
| miR-99b, let-7e, miR-125a | 21370890–21371640 |
|
| miR-497, miR-195 | 50049193–50048962 |
|
| miR-212, miR-132 | 45640251–45639901 |
|
| miR-144, miR-451 | 42750581–42750479 |
|
| miR-194, miR-192 | 25044429–25044298 |
|
| miR-106b, miR-93, miR-25 | 8034691–8034329 |
|
| miR-193b, miR-365-2 | 30682640–30682716 |
|
| miR-143, miR-145 | 28434698–28433339 |
|
| miR-191, let-7g | 35442186–35442267 |
|
| miR-92a, miR-19b, miR-20a, miR-19a, miR-18a, miR-17 | 61793120–61792474 |
|
| miR-16-2, miR-15a | 21138923–21138839 |
|
| miR-10b, miR-128-2 | 19492393–19492419 |
|
| miR-582, miR-30c-2 | 62697786–62697808 |
|
| miR-342, let-7f, let-7d | 54150817–54148904 |
|
| miR-204b-2, miR-7-3 | 6798843–6798880 |
|
| miR-23b, miR-27b, miR-24-2 | 2317924–2317244 |
|
| miR-656, miR-541, miR-496, miR-412, miR-410, miR-409, miR-377 | 42937011–42930226 |
| miR-369, miR-154 | ||
|
| miR-485, miR-134, miR-382, miR-487a, miR-655, miR-544-2, miR-889 | 42925986-42911169 |
| miR-539, miR-487b, miR-381, miR-1185, miR-376a, miR-376b, miR-376c | ||
|
| miR-495, miR-543, miR-1193, miR-494, miR-329, miR-758, miR-323 | 42906084–42894709 |
| miR-1197, miR-380, miR-299, miR-411, miR-379 | ||
|
| miR-136, miR-432, miR-127, miR-433, miR-431 | 42748685–42745108 |
|
| miR-181b, miR-181a | 28673901–28672731 |
|
| miR-126, miR-219-2 | 31667420–31667458 |
|
| miR-99a-2, miR-125b-2, let-7c | 15508980–15509792 |
|
| let-7a, let-7a-2 | 42016391–42016461 |
|
| miR-33a, miR-135a-2 | 22270420–22270497 |
|
| miR-653, miR-181a-2 | 26398982–26399027 |
|
| miR-664, miR-194-2, miR-215 | 10337974–10337730 |
|
| miR-424, miR-503 | 106954949–106954687 |
|
| miR-542, miR-451a, miR-450a, miR-450b | 106949741–106948733 |
|
| miR-106a, miR-18b, miR-20b, miR-19b-2, miR-92a-2, miR-363 | 106692701–106691957 |
|
| miR-374a, miR-545 | 55500596–55500517 |
|
| miR-374b, miR-421 | 55435984–55435897 |
|
| miR-502, miR-660, miR-500-2, miR-501, miR-362, miR-500 | 40077407–40073367 |
|
| miR-188, miR-532 | 40068847–40068549 |
|
| miR-222, miR-221 | 37091426–37090756 |
Figure 6The percentage distribution of the first nucleotide at the 5′ end of all miRNAs of all lengths.
Various nucleotides are detected at the 5′ end of miRNA sequences. In general, U is the predominant nucleotide at 5′ end of all miRNAs of all lengths except for miRNAs of lengths 19 and 21.
Figure 7The percentage distribution of base composition at each position of miRNAs.
MiRNAs in all combined tissues.