Comparative transcriptome analysis of trout skin pigment cells
Abstract Background Enormous variability in skin colour and patterning is a characteristic of teleost fish, including Salmonidae fishes, which present themselves as a suitable model for studying mechanisms of pigment patterning. In order to screen for candidate genes potentially involved in the spec...
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doaj-6124e779d2874908930f211c699fe5832020-11-25T02:04:33ZengBMCBMC Genomics1471-21642019-05-0120111510.1186/s12864-019-5714-1Comparative transcriptome analysis of trout skin pigment cellsIda Djurdjevič0Tomasz Furmanek1Seita Miyazawa2Simona Sušnik Bajec3Department of Animal Science, Biotechnical Faculty, University of LjubljanaInstitute of Marine ResearchGraduate School of Frontier Biosciences, Osaka UniversityDepartment of Animal Science, Biotechnical Faculty, University of LjubljanaAbstract Background Enormous variability in skin colour and patterning is a characteristic of teleost fish, including Salmonidae fishes, which present themselves as a suitable model for studying mechanisms of pigment patterning. In order to screen for candidate genes potentially involved in the specific skin pigment pattern in marble trout (labyrinthine skin pattern) and brown trout (spotted skin pattern), we conducted comparative transcriptome analysis between differently pigmented dermis sections of the adult skin of the two species. Results Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) possibly associated with skin pigment pattern were identified. The expression profile of 27 DEGs was further tested with quantitative real-time PCR on a larger number of samples. Expression of a subset of ten of these genes was analysed in hybrid (marble x brown) trout individuals and compared with the complexity of their skin pigment pattern. A correlation between the phenotype and the expression profile assessed for hybrid individuals was detected for four (gja5, clcn2, cdkn1a and tjp1) of the ten candidate genes tested. The potential role of these genes in skin pigment pattern maintenance is discussed. Conclusions Our results indicate that the maintenance of different pigment patterns in trout is dependent upon specific communication—involving gap junctions, tight junctions and ion channels—between chromatophores present in differentially pigmented skin regions.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12864-019-5714-1Salmo marmoratusSalmo truttaPigment cellDEGRNA-seqqPCR |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ida Djurdjevič Tomasz Furmanek Seita Miyazawa Simona Sušnik Bajec |
spellingShingle |
Ida Djurdjevič Tomasz Furmanek Seita Miyazawa Simona Sušnik Bajec Comparative transcriptome analysis of trout skin pigment cells BMC Genomics Salmo marmoratus Salmo trutta Pigment cell DEG RNA-seq qPCR |
author_facet |
Ida Djurdjevič Tomasz Furmanek Seita Miyazawa Simona Sušnik Bajec |
author_sort |
Ida Djurdjevič |
title |
Comparative transcriptome analysis of trout skin pigment cells |
title_short |
Comparative transcriptome analysis of trout skin pigment cells |
title_full |
Comparative transcriptome analysis of trout skin pigment cells |
title_fullStr |
Comparative transcriptome analysis of trout skin pigment cells |
title_full_unstemmed |
Comparative transcriptome analysis of trout skin pigment cells |
title_sort |
comparative transcriptome analysis of trout skin pigment cells |
publisher |
BMC |
series |
BMC Genomics |
issn |
1471-2164 |
publishDate |
2019-05-01 |
description |
Abstract Background Enormous variability in skin colour and patterning is a characteristic of teleost fish, including Salmonidae fishes, which present themselves as a suitable model for studying mechanisms of pigment patterning. In order to screen for candidate genes potentially involved in the specific skin pigment pattern in marble trout (labyrinthine skin pattern) and brown trout (spotted skin pattern), we conducted comparative transcriptome analysis between differently pigmented dermis sections of the adult skin of the two species. Results Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) possibly associated with skin pigment pattern were identified. The expression profile of 27 DEGs was further tested with quantitative real-time PCR on a larger number of samples. Expression of a subset of ten of these genes was analysed in hybrid (marble x brown) trout individuals and compared with the complexity of their skin pigment pattern. A correlation between the phenotype and the expression profile assessed for hybrid individuals was detected for four (gja5, clcn2, cdkn1a and tjp1) of the ten candidate genes tested. The potential role of these genes in skin pigment pattern maintenance is discussed. Conclusions Our results indicate that the maintenance of different pigment patterns in trout is dependent upon specific communication—involving gap junctions, tight junctions and ion channels—between chromatophores present in differentially pigmented skin regions. |
topic |
Salmo marmoratus Salmo trutta Pigment cell DEG RNA-seq qPCR |
url |
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12864-019-5714-1 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT idadjurdjevic comparativetranscriptomeanalysisoftroutskinpigmentcells AT tomaszfurmanek comparativetranscriptomeanalysisoftroutskinpigmentcells AT seitamiyazawa comparativetranscriptomeanalysisoftroutskinpigmentcells AT simonasusnikbajec comparativetranscriptomeanalysisoftroutskinpigmentcells |
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