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Genome-wide annotation of protein-coding genes in pig

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  • Max Karlsson, Royal Institute of Technology
  • ,
  • Evelina Sjöstedt, Karolinska Institutet, Uppsala University
  • ,
  • Per Oksvold, Royal Institute of Technology
  • ,
  • Åsa Sivertsson, Royal Institute of Technology
  • ,
  • Jinrong Huang, BGI-Shenzhen, Shenzhen 518083, China
  • ,
  • María Bueno Álvez, Royal Institute of Technology
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  • Muhammad Arif, Royal Institute of Technology
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  • Xiangyu Li, Royal Institute of Technology
  • ,
  • Lin Lin
  • Jiaying Yu, BGI-Shenzhen, Shenzhen 518083, China
  • ,
  • Tao Ma, BGI-Shenzhen, Shenzhen 518083, China
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  • Fengping Xu, BGI-Shenzhen, Shenzhen 518083, China
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  • Peng Han, Lars Bolund Institute of Regenerative Medicine
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  • Hui Jiang, BGI-Shenzhen, Shenzhen 518083, China
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  • Adil Mardinoglu, Royal Institute of Technology
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  • Cheng Zhang, Royal Institute of Technology
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  • Kalle von Feilitzen, Royal Institute of Technology
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  • Xun Xu, BGI-Shenzhen, Shenzhen 518083, China
  • ,
  • Jian Wang, BGI-Shenzhen, Shenzhen 518083, China
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  • Huanming Yang, BGI-Shenzhen, Shenzhen 518083, China
  • ,
  • Lars Bolund
  • Wen Zhong, Royal Institute of Technology
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  • Linn Fagerberg, Royal Institute of Technology
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  • Cecilia Lindskog, Uppsala University
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  • Fredrik Pontén, Uppsala University
  • ,
  • Jan Mulder, Karolinska Institutet
  • ,
  • Yonglun Luo
  • Mathias Uhlen, Royal Institute of Technology, Karolinska Institutet

BACKGROUND: There is a need for functional genome-wide annotation of the protein-coding genes to get a deeper understanding of mammalian biology. Here, a new annotation strategy is introduced based on dimensionality reduction and density-based clustering of whole-body co-expression patterns. This strategy has been used to explore the gene expression landscape in pig, and we present a whole-body map of all protein-coding genes in all major pig tissues and organs.

RESULTS: An open-access pig expression map ( www.rnaatlas.org ) is presented based on the expression of 350 samples across 98 well-defined pig tissues divided into 44 tissue groups. A new UMAP-based classification scheme is introduced, in which all protein-coding genes are stratified into tissue expression clusters based on body-wide expression profiles. The distribution and tissue specificity of all 22,342 protein-coding pig genes are presented.

CONCLUSIONS: Here, we present a new genome-wide annotation strategy based on dimensionality reduction and density-based clustering. A genome-wide resource of the transcriptome map across all major tissues and organs in pig is presented, and the data is available as an open-access resource ( www.rnaatlas.org ), including a comparison to the expression of human orthologs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number25
JournalBMC Biology
Volume20
Number of pages18
ISSN1741-7007
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2022

Bibliographical note

© 2022. The Author(s).

    Research areas

  • Annotation, Gene expression, Genome-wide, Protein-coding genes, Tissue expression profile, Transcriptome

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