| Literature DB >> 30598832 |
Sunday O Peters1, Marcos De Donato2, Tanveer Hussain3, Hectorina Rodulfo2, Masroor E Babar3, Ikhide G Imumorin4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Necdin (NDN), a member of the melanoma antigen family showing imprinted pattern of expression, has been implicated as causing Prader-Willi symptoms, and known to participate in cellular growth, cellular migration and differentiation. The region where NDN is located has been associated to QTLs affecting reproduction and early growth in cattle, but location and functional analysis of the molecular mechanisms have not been established.Entities:
Keywords: Bovini; Caprini; MAGE; Phylogenetics
Year: 2018 PMID: 30598832 PMCID: PMC6302488 DOI: 10.1186/s40781-018-0191-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anim Sci Technol ISSN: 2055-0391
Species and breeds of Bovidae with the sequence of NDN gene studied and the accession numbers of all the sequences published in the GenBank
| Breed | Species | Number | Country | Accession Numbers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Achai | Indicine cattle | 3 | Pakistan | JX196877-JX196879 |
| Angus | Taurine cattle | 3 | USA | JX196880-JX196882 |
| Bhagnari | Indicine cattle | 3 | Pakistan | JX196883-JX196885 |
| Brangus | Indicine x taurine cattle | 3 | USA | JX196886-JX196888 |
| Cholistani | Indicine cattle | 3 | Pakistan | JX196889-JX196891 |
| Dajal | Indicine cattle | 2 | Pakistan | JX196892-JX196893 |
| Dhanni | Indicine cattle | 3 | Pakistan | JX196894-JX196896 |
| Hereford | Taurine cattle | 3 | USA | JX196897-JX196899 |
| Holstein | Taurine cattle | 3 | USA | JX196900-JX196902 |
| Lohani | Indicine cattle | 2 | Pakistan | JX196903-JX196904 |
| Nari Master | Indicine x taurine cattle | 3 | Pakistan | JX196905-JX196907 |
| N’Dama | African cattle | 2 | Nigeria | JX196908-JX196909 |
| Muturu | African cattle | 2 | Nigeria | JX196910-JX196911 |
| Red Sindhi | Indicine cattle | 3 | Pakistan | JX196912-JX196914 |
| Sahiwal | Indicine cattle | 3 | Pakistan | JX196915-JX196917 |
| Sokoto Gudali | Indicine cattle | 2 | Nigeria | JX196918-JX196919 |
| Tharparker | Indicine cattle | 3 | Pakistan | JX196920-JX196922 |
| White Fulani | Indicine cattle | 3 | Nigeria | JX196923-JX196925 |
| Yak | B. gruniens | 3 | Pakistan | JX196926-JX196928 |
| Nili-Ravi |
| 1 | Pakistan | JX196873 |
| Ravi | B. bubalis | 2 | Pakistan | JX196874 JX196875 |
| Nili | B. bubalis | 1 | Pakistan | JX196876 |
| Kajli |
| 1 | Pakistan | JX196929 |
| Finn | O. aries | 6 | USA | JX196930-JX196932 |
| Dorset | O. aries | 2 | USA | JX196933 JX196934 |
| WAD | O. aries | 1 | Nigeria | JX196938 |
| Beetal |
| 1 | Pakistan | JX196939 |
| White | C. hircus | 1 | Pakistan | JX196940 |
| WAD | C. hircus | 2 | Nigeria | JX196941 JX196942 |
| Red Sokoto | C. hircus | 2 | Nigeria | JX196943 JX196944 |
Nucleotide changes in the sequence of the oligonucleotides used as primers for PCR and sequencing compared to the sequences in several species of Cetartiodactyla analyzed in this study
| Gene | NDN-FCd | NDN-FUp | NDN-RCd |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cattle | GGAAAGCAGACTCGAAGAGC | GAGTTTTCGCTGGTCAAAGC | GCTTTCGCTTTTGTGCTACC |
| Yak | GGAAAGCAGACTCGAAGAGC | GAGTTTTCGCTGGTCAAAGC | GCTTTCGCTTTTGTGCTACC |
| Bison | GGAAAGCAGACTCGAAGAGC | GAGTTTTCGCTGGTCAAAGC | GCTTTCGCTTTTGTGCTACC |
| Buffalo | GGAAAGCAGACTCGAAGAGC | GAGTTTTCGCTGGTCAAAGC | GCTTTCGCTTTTGTGCTACC |
| Goat | GGAAAGCAGACTCGAAGAGC | GAGTTTTCGCTGGTCAAAGC | GCTTTCGCTTTTGTGCTACC |
| Sheep | GGAAAGCAGACTCGAAGAGC | GAGTTTTCGCTGGTCAAAGC | GCTTTCGCTTTTGTGCTACC |
| Oryx | GGAAAGCAGACTCGAAGAGC | GAGTTTTCGCTGGTCAAAGC | GCTTTCGCTTTTGTGCTA |
| Giraffe | GGAAAGCAGACTCGAAGAGC | GAGTTTTCGCTGGTCAAAGC | GCTTTCGCTTTTGTGCTACC |
| Deer | GGAAAGCAGACTCGAAGAGC | GAGTTTTCGCTGGTCAAAGC | GCTTTCGC |
| Pig | GGA | GAGTT | GCTTTCGCTTTTGTGCTACC |
| Camel | GGA | GAGTT | GCTTTCGCTTTTGTGCTACC |
Fig. 1PCR amplification of the 1283 bp fragment containing the coding region of the Necdin (NDN) gene in cattle (lines 1–9) yak (lines 10–11) buffalo (lines 12–14) goats (lines 15–17) and sheep (lines 18–20) run in a 1.5% agarose gel and stained with GelRed (Phenix Research Products Candler NC). M: Molecular weight marker 100pb (GENEMate Quanti-Marker UT)
Fig. 2Structure of the Necdin gene showing the sequence conservation for pig, horse and dog using the program suite mVISTA. The primers used in this study are shown as arrowheads oriented from 5′ to 3′ and the MAGE homology domain (MHD) is also shown. Graphs of the synonymous and non-synonymous substitution rates, from the SNPs published on GeneBank and the variants found here, are shown
The nucleotide changes phylogeneticly important in the NDN sequences of cattle, yak, buffalo, goat and sheep, and the amino acid changes when appropriate
The numbering of the sequences was started at the transcription start site. The nucleotide in light blue represent the coding region while the darker blue represents the MAGE homology domain of the protein. N is the number of animals studied. The AA change shown in green are predicted to be neutral to the protein function, while those shown in red are predicted to be deleterious by PROVEAN software
Characteristics of the NDN proteins in Bovidae deducted from their sequences, using the web tool ProtParam
| Species | Molecular Weight | pI | Net Charge | Instability Index | Aliphatic Index | GRAVYa |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 36,590 | 8.88 | + 4 | 59.4 | 80.8 | −0.414 |
| Yak | 36,590 | 8.88 | + 4 | 59.4 | 80.8 | −0.414 |
| Bison | 36,590 | 8.88 | + 4 | 59.4 | 80.8 | −0.414 |
| Buffalo | 36,597 | 8.67 | + 3 | 60.0 | 80.5 | −0.425 |
| Goat | 36,597 | 8.67 | + 3 | 60.0 | 80.5 | −0.425 |
| Sheep | 36,615 | 8.88 | + 4 | 57.40 | 80.5 | −0.439 |
| Pig | 36,382 | 9.05 | +5 | 59.6 | 81.1 | −0.381 |
| Horse | 36,406 | 8.34 | + 2 | 61.2 | 79.0 | −0.415 |
| Dog | 36,469 | 9.03 | +5 | 62.5 | 77.8 | −0.459 |
agrand average of hydropathicity
Fig. 3A median joining network of the genomic sequences using Network software (www.fluxus-engineering.com) of the NDN genes in species of Bovidae compared to pig, horse and dog. Circles represent haplotypes and have a size proportional to their frequencies
Fig. 4Phylogenetic analysis by Maximum Likelihood (a) and Bayesian (b) methods with the sequences obtained in this study and from GenBank on other Cetartiodactyla species. The percentages of replicate trees in which the associated taxa clustered together in the bootstrap test (1000 replicates for the ML tree and 200,000 iterations for the Bayesian tree) are shown next to the branches. The tree is drawn to scale with branch lengths in the same units as those of the evolutionary distances used to infer the phylogenetic tree which are the number of base substitutions per site. For the ML method, the tree with the highest log likelihood (− 5444.4659) is shown