Multi-species annotation of transcriptome and chromatin structure in domesticated animals

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Foissac, Sylvain | Djebali, Sarah | Munyard, Kylie | Vialaneix, Nathalie | Rau, Andrea | Muret, Kévin | Esquerre, Diane | Zytnicki, Matthias | Derrien, Thomas | Bardou, Philippe | Blanc, Fany | Cabau, Cédric | Crisci, Elisa | Dhorne-Pollet, Sophie | Drouet, Françoise | Faraut, Thomas | González, Ignacio | Goubil, Adeline | Lacroix-Lamandé, Sonia | Laurent, Fabrice | Marthey, Sylvain | Marti-Marimon, Maria | Momal-Leisenring, Raphaëlle | Mompart, Florence | Quéré, Pascale | Robelin, David | San Cristobal, Magali | Tosser-Klopp, Gwenola | Vincent-Naulleau, Silvia | Fabre, Stéphane | Pinard-van Der Laan, Marie-Hélène | Klopp, Christophe | Tixier-Boichard, Michèle | Acloque, Hervé | Lagarrigue, Sandrine | Giuffra, Elisabetta

Edité par CCSD ; BioMed Central -

International audience. Background: Comparative genomics studies are central in identifying the coding and non-coding elements associated with complex traits, and the functional annotation of genomes is a critical step to decipher the genotype-to-phenotype relationships in livestock animals. As part of the Functional Annotation of Animal Genomes (FAANG) action, the FR-AgENCODE project aimed to create reference functional maps of domesticated animals by profiling the landscape of transcription (RNA-seq), chromatin accessibility (ATAC-seq) and conformation (Hi-C) in species representing ruminants (cattle, goat), monogastrics (pig) and birds (chicken), using three target samples related to metabolism (liver) and immunity (CD4+ and CD8+ T cells). Results: RNA-seq assays considerably extended the available catalog of annotated transcripts and identified differentially expressed genes with unknown function, including new syntenic lncRNAs. ATAC-seq highlighted an enrichment for transcription factor binding sites in differentially accessible regions of the chromatin. Comparative analyses revealed a core set of conserved regulatory regions across species. Topologically associating domains (TADs) and epigenetic A/B compartments annotated from Hi-C data were consistent with RNA-seq and ATAC-seq data. Multi-species comparisons showed that conserved TAD boundaries had stronger insulation properties than species-specific ones and that the genomic distribution of orthologous genes in A/B compartments was significantly conserved across species. Conclusions: We report the first multi-species and multi-assay genome annotation results obtained by a FAANG project. Beyond the generation of reference annotations and the confirmation of previous findings on model animals, the integrative analysis of data from multiple assays and species sheds a new light on the multi-scale selective (Continued on next page)

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