4.6 Article

Characterization of Accessible Chromatin Regions in Cattle Rumen Epithelial Tissue during Weaning

Journal

GENES
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes13030535

Keywords

ATAC-seq; cattle; epithelial tissue; open chromatin; rumen development; weaning

Funding

  1. AFRI from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) Animal Genome and Reproduction Programs [2019-67015-29321, 2020-67015-31398, 2021-67015-33409]

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This study identified accessible chromatin regions in rumen epithelial tissue of pre- and post-weaning calves and discovered differentially accessible regions (DARs) related to rumen development. The results suggest that TGF beta and ILK signaling pathways play essential roles in rumen development through the regulation of cellular adhesions.
Weaning in ruminants is characterized by the transition from a milk-based diet to a solid diet, which drives a critical gastrointestinal tract transformation. Understanding the regulatory control of this transformation during weaning can help to identify strategies to improve rumen health. This study aimed to identify regions of accessible chromatin in rumen epithelial tissue in pre- and post-weaning calves and investigate differentially accessible regions (DARs) to uncover regulatory elements in cattle rumen development using the ATAC-seq approach. A total of 126,071 peaks were identified, covering 1.15% of the cattle genome. From these accessible regions, 2766 DARs were discovered. Gene ontology enrichment resulted in GO terms related to the cell adhesion, anchoring junction, growth, cell migration, motility, and morphogenesis. In addition, putative regulatory canonical pathways were identified (TGF beta, integrin-linked kinase, integrin signaling, and regulation of the epithelial-mesenchymal transition). Canonical pathways integrated with co-expression results showed that TGF beta and ILK signaling pathways play essential roles in rumen development through the regulation of cellular adhesions. In this study, DARs during weaning were identified, revealing enhancers, transcription factors, and candidate target genes that represent potential biomarkers for the bovine rumen development, which will serve as a molecular tool for rumen development studies.

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