| Literature DB >> 30918658 |
Yuanyuan Zhang1,2, Deping Han1, Xianggui Dong1, Jiankui Wang1, Jianfei Chen1, Yanzhu Yao1, Hesham Y A Darwish1,3, Wansheng Liu2, Xuemei Deng1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The widely observed RNA-DNA differences (RDDs) have been found to be due to nucleotide alteration by RNA editing. Canonical RNA editing (i.e., A-to-I and C-to-U editing) mediated by the adenosine deaminases acting on RNA (ADAR) family and apolipoprotein B mRNA editing catalytic polypeptide-like (APOBEC) family during the transcriptional process is considered common and essential for the development of an individual. To date, an increasing number of RNA editing sites have been reported in human, rodents, and some farm animals; however, genome-wide detection of RNA editing events in sheep has not been reported. The aim of this study was to identify RNA editing events in sheep by comparing the RNA-seq and DNA-seq data from three biological replicates of the kidney and spleen tissues.Entities:
Keywords: DNA resequencing; RNA editing; RNA-DNA differences; RNA-seq; Sheep
Year: 2019 PMID: 30918658 PMCID: PMC6419479 DOI: 10.1186/s40104-019-0331-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anim Sci Biotechnol ISSN: 1674-9782
Alignment of clean reads of DNA and RNA samples
| Alignment | DNA | Kidney RNA | Spleen RNA | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Raw reads | MQ > 20 | Raw reads | Uniquely mapped | Raw reads | Uniquely mapped | |
| IND1 | 228,494,214 | 85.81% | 84,918,643 | 52.63% | 71,544,583 | 56.74% |
| IND2 | 310,038,163 | 87.75% | 78,384,278 | 48.53% | 68,023,085 | 54.89% |
| IND3 | 227,778,931 | 86.23% | 82,092,796 | 54.92% | 73,439,711 | 57.89% |
Fig. 1Normalized expression levels of ADAR and ADARB1 between the kidney and spleen tissues. Expression between the tissues was calculated by tissue-scale normalization. Pairwise t-test was used to determine the differences in the expression levels between the spleen and kidney. The ADAR expression was significantly (P < 0.05) higher in the spleen than in the kidney, but the ADARB1 expression was not significantly different between the spleen and kidney
Fig. 2Distribution of the locations of the common RDDs in kidney and spleen. Genomic location of each RDD was classified depending on the proximity to the nearest known gene. Summary of the locations of RDDs from 607 common RDDs in kidney and 994 common RDDs in spleen
Fig. 3Types of observed RDDs on the transcripts. 221 and 428 common RDDs were found locating on the transcriptional regions. Among the 12 types of RDDs, the most frequent event was A-to-G
Fig. 4IGV screenshot for RNA editing sites in BLCAP (a) and BEIL1 (b). The two IGV screenshots showing the alignments of genomic and RNA reads in BLCAP (a) and BEIL1 (b). The two editing sites (NC_019470.2:65916359 and NC_019475.2:32339099) were at the center lines. From top to bottom, the tracks are as follows: genomic DNA reads, RNA reads in Kidney, RNA reads in Spleen, reference sequences and transcripts