BMC Genomics (Oct 2011)

Sequence comparison of prefrontal cortical brain transcriptome from a tame and an aggressive silver fox (<it>Vulpes vulpes</it>)

  • Sun Qi,
  • Shikhevich Svetlana G,
  • Shepeleva Darya V,
  • Vladimirova Anastasiya V,
  • Dubreuil Michael M,
  • Padte Ravee,
  • Gulevich Rimma G,
  • Kharlamova Anastasiya V,
  • Oskina Irina N,
  • Li Lewyn,
  • Teiling Clotilde,
  • Johnson Jennifer L,
  • Kukekova Anna V,
  • Ponnala Lalit,
  • Temnykh Svetlana V,
  • Trut Lyudmila N,
  • Acland Gregory M

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-12-482
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 482

Abstract

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Abstract Background Two strains of the silver fox (Vulpes vulpes), with markedly different behavioral phenotypes, have been developed by long-term selection for behavior. Foxes from the tame strain exhibit friendly behavior towards humans, paralleling the sociability of canine puppies, whereas foxes from the aggressive strain are defensive and exhibit aggression to humans. To understand the genetic differences underlying these behavioral phenotypes fox-specific genomic resources are needed. Results cDNA from mRNA from pre-frontal cortex of a tame and an aggressive fox was sequenced using the Roche 454 FLX Titanium platform (> 2.5 million reads & 0.9 Gbase of tame fox sequence; >3.3 million reads & 1.2 Gbase of aggressive fox sequence). Over 80% of the fox reads were assembled into contigs. Mapping fox reads against the fox transcriptome assembly and the dog genome identified over 30,000 high confidence fox-specific SNPs. Fox transcripts for approximately 14,000 genes were identified using SwissProt and the dog RefSeq databases. An at least 2-fold expression difference between the two samples (p Conclusions Transcriptome sequencing significantly expanded genomic resources available for the fox, a species without a sequenced genome. In a very cost efficient manner this yielded a large number of fox-specific SNP markers for genetic studies and provided significant insights into the gene expression profile of the fox pre-frontal cortex; expression differences between the two fox samples; and a catalogue of potentially important gene-specific sequence variants. This result demonstrates the utility of this approach for developing genomic resources in species with limited genomic information.