Animals (Jun 2020)

Effect of Nutritional Restriction on the Hair Follicles Development and Skin Transcriptome of Chinese Merino Sheep

  • Xuefeng Lv,
  • Lei Chen,
  • Sangang He,
  • Chenxi Liu,
  • Bin Han,
  • Zhilong Liu,
  • Mayila Yusupu,
  • Hugh Blair,
  • Paul Kenyon,
  • Stephen Morris,
  • Wenrong Li,
  • Mingjun Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani10061058
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6
p. 1058

Abstract

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The high concentration of secondary branched wool follicles is a distinctive feature of the Merino sheep. At present, the molecular control of the development and branching of secondary wool follicles (SF) remains elusive. To reveal the potential genes associated with the development of hair follicles, we investigated the characteristics of prenatal and postnatal development of wool follicles, and the transcriptional expression profile in fetuses/lambs from dams under either maternal maintenance or sub-maintenance (75% maintenance) nutrition. The density of SF and the ratio of SF to primary wool follicles (PF) were reduced (p SFRP4, PITX1, BAMBI, and KRT16, which were involved in secondary wool follicles branching and development, were identified. Our results indicate that nutritional intervention imposed on pregnant ewes by short-term sub-maintenance nutrition could provide a strategy for the study of wool follicle development. Overall insight into the global gene expression associated with SF development can be used to investigate the underlying mechanisms of SF branching in Merino sheep.

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