Literature DB >> 25391663

Longitudinal muscle gene expression patterns associated with differential intramuscular fat in cattle.

N J Hudson1, A Reverter1, P L Greenwood2, B Guo1, L M Cafe2, B P Dalrymple1.   

Abstract

Intramuscular fat (IMF) can improve meat product quality through its impact on flavour and juiciness. High marbling cuts can command premium prices in some countries and grading systems, but there is substantial cost involved in choosing to grain feed animals in an effort to deposit more IMF. There would be value in developing methods to predict predisposition to 'marble' well. Unfortunately, the biological mechanisms underpinning marbling remain a mystery: the key adipocyte cell populations have not been defined, there are no reliable DNA markers, no known (if any) causal mutations and gene expression analyses in the main have tended to characterise increases in expression of end-point fat metabolism proteins such as the fatty acid-binding proteins. To shed light on expression-based markers of marbling potential, we contrasted LD gene expression in high IMF Wagyu cross animals with a low IMF Piedmontese cross at various time points. The expected divergence in the fat metabolism genes FABP4, THRSP, CIDEC and ACACA between the breeds occurs surprisingly late in postnatal development at about 20 months. On the other hand, divergent expression of WISP2, RAI14 and CYP4F2 was discovered in animals at or before 12 months of age, suggesting these genes may have potential as earlier predictors of marbling potential. In line with other researchers, we found intriguing links between IMF development and connective tissue remodelling. WISP2 - a novel adipokine highly expressed and secreted by adipose precursor cells and an inhibitor of the pro-fibrotic connective tissue growth factor - emerges as a particularly attractive candidate. It is relatively upregulated in high marbling Wagyu before admission to feedlotting, somewhere between 7 and 12 months. This difference is subsequently maintained until 25 months, but not thereafter. RAI14, thought to play a role in porcine adipocyte differentiation and with links to retinoic acid metabolism, has an unusual expression profile. Its expression level increases monotonically with postnatal development, and is always higher in Wagyu than Piedmontese. Strong, sustained upregulation of the anti-inflammatory CYP4F2 in Piedmontese is consistent with Wagyu adiposity being a pro-inflammatory state. Application of regulatory impact factor analysis, a network method for identifying causal effector molecules, suggests marbling roles for transcription factors previously implicated in (1) the formation of liposarcoma (unconstrained fatty masses) (YEATS4, MDM2), (2) adipogenesis (CREBL2, SP1, STAT1) and (3) inflammation (ISGF3G, HOXB13, PML).

Entities:  

Keywords:  adipocyte

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25391663     DOI: 10.1017/S1751731114002754

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Animal        ISSN: 1751-7311            Impact factor:   3.240


  22 in total

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4.  The history of adipocyte and adipose tissue research in meat animals.

Authors:  Gary J Hausman; Werner G Bergen; Terry D Etherton; Steve B Smith
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5.  ACOX1, regulated by C/EBPα and miR-25-3p, promotes bovine preadipocyte adipogenesis.

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6.  Transcriptome analysis of cattle muscle identifies potential markers for skeletal muscle growth rate and major cell types.

Authors:  Bing Guo; Paul L Greenwood; Linda M Cafe; Guanghong Zhou; Wangang Zhang; Brian P Dalrymple
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2015-03-13       Impact factor: 3.969

7.  Gene expression profile of Musculus longissimus dorsi in bulls of a Charolais × Holstein F2-cross with divergent intramuscular fat content.

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Journal:  Int J Biol Sci       Date:  2017-04-10       Impact factor: 6.580

9.  Progesterone signalling in broiler skeletal muscle is associated with divergent feed efficiency.

Authors:  Walter Bottje; Byung-Whi Kong; Antonio Reverter; Ashley J Waardenberg; Kentu Lassiter; Nicholas J Hudson
Journal:  BMC Syst Biol       Date:  2017-02-24

10.  Melatonin promotes triacylglycerol accumulation via MT2 receptor during differentiation in bovine intramuscular preadipocytes.

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