Publication | Open Access
Gene expression in breast muscle associated with feed efficiency in a single male broiler line using a chicken 44K oligo microarray. I. Top differentially expressed genes
65
Citations
120
References
2011
Year
EngineeringGeneticsTranscriptomics TechnologyGene CharacterizationMolecular GeneticsGene Expression ProfilingMammary Gland DevelopmentAnimal GeneticsTranscriptional RegulationCrna ProbesBiostatisticsBreast MuscleMolecular DiagnosticsMicroarray Data AnalysisAnimal PhysiologyPlant Gene ExpressionBiomedical AnalysisGlobal Rna ExpressionGene ExpressionEpigenetic RegulationFunctional GenomicsBioinformaticsOligo MicroarrayGene FunctionAnimal ScienceSystems BiologyMedicinePoultry Science
Global RNA expression in breast muscle obtained from a male broiler line phenotyped for high or low feed efficiency (FE) was investigated. Pooled RNA samples (n = 6/phenotype) labeled with cyanine 3 or cyanine 5 fluorescent dyes to generate cRNA probes were hybridized on a 4 × 44K chicken oligo microarray. Local polynomial regression normalization was applied to background-corrected red and green intensities with a moderated t-statistic. Corresponding P-values were computed and adjusted for multiple testing by false discovery rate to identify differentially expressed genes. Microarray validation was carried out by comparing findings with quantitative reverse-transcription PCR. A 1.3-fold difference in gene expression was set as a cutoff value, which encompassed 20% (782 of 4,011) of the total number of genes that were differentially expressed between FE phenotypes. Using an online software program (Ingenuity Pathway Analysis), the top 10 upregulated genes identified by Ingenuity Pathway Analysis in the high-FE group were generally associated with anabolic processes. In contrast, 7 of the top 10 downregulated genes in the high-FE phenotype (upregulated in the low-FE phenotype) were associated with muscle fiber development, muscle function, and cytoskeletal organization, with the remaining 3 genes associated with self-recognition or stress-responding genes. The results from this study focusing on only the top differentially expressed genes suggest that the high-FE broiler phenotype is derived from the upregulation of genes associated with anabolic processes as well as a downregulation of genes associated with muscle fiber development, muscle function, cytoskeletal organization, and stress response.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1