Genetics Selection Evolution (Sep 2022)

Integration of multi-omics data reveals cis-regulatory variants that are associated with phenotypic differentiation of eastern from western pigs

  • Yuwen Liu,
  • Yang Fu,
  • Yalan Yang,
  • Guoqiang Yi,
  • Jinmin Lian,
  • Bingkun Xie,
  • Yilong Yao,
  • Muya Chen,
  • Yongchao Niu,
  • Lei Liu,
  • Liyuan Wang,
  • Yongsheng Zhang,
  • Xinhao Fan,
  • Yijie Tang,
  • Pengxiang Yuan,
  • Min Zhu,
  • Qiaowei Li,
  • Song Zhang,
  • Yun Chen,
  • Binhu Wang,
  • Jieyu He,
  • Dan Lu,
  • Ivan Liachko,
  • Shawn T. Sullivan,
  • Bin Pang,
  • Yaoqing Chen,
  • Xin He,
  • Kui Li,
  • Zhonglin Tang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12711-022-00754-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 54, no. 1
pp. 1 – 22

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background The genetic mechanisms that underlie phenotypic differentiation in breeding animals have important implications in evolutionary biology and agriculture. However, the contribution of cis-regulatory variants to pig phenotypes is poorly understood. Therefore, our aim was to elucidate the molecular mechanisms by which non-coding variants cause phenotypic differences in pigs by combining evolutionary biology analyses and functional genomics. Results We obtained a high-resolution phased chromosome-scale reference genome with a contig N50 of 18.03 Mb for the Luchuan pig breed (a representative eastern breed) and profiled potential selective sweeps in eastern and western pigs by resequencing the genomes of 234 pigs. Multi-tissue transcriptome and chromatin accessibility analyses of these regions suggest that tissue-specific selection pressure is mediated by promoters and distal cis-regulatory elements. Promoter variants that are associated with increased expression of the lysozyme (LYZ) gene in the small intestine might enhance the immunity of the gastrointestinal tract and roughage tolerance in pigs. In skeletal muscle, an enhancer-modulating single-nucleotide polymorphism that is associated with up-regulation of the expression of the troponin C1, slow skeletal and cardiac type (TNNC1) gene might increase the proportion of slow muscle fibers and affect meat quality. Conclusions Our work sheds light on the molecular mechanisms by which non-coding variants shape phenotypic differences in pigs and provides valuable resources and novel perspectives to dissect the role of gene regulatory evolution in animal domestication and breeding.