Abstract

BackgroundAvian pathogenic E. coli (APEC) can lead to a loss in millions of dollars in poultry annually because of mortality and produce contamination. Studies have verified that many immune-related genes undergo changes in alternative splicing (AS), along with nonsense mediated decay (NMD), to regulate the immune system under different conditions. Therefore, the splicing profiles of primary lymphoid tissues with systemic APEC infection need to be comprehensively examined.ResultsGene expression in RNAseq data were obtained for three different immune tissues (bone marrow, thymus, and bursa) from three phenotype birds (non-challenged, resistant, and susceptible birds) at two time points. Alternative 5′ splice sites and exon skipping/inclusion were identified as the major alternative splicing events in avian primary immune organs under systemic APEC infection. In this study, we detected hundreds of differentially-expressed-transcript-containing genes (DETs) between different phenotype birds at 5 days post-infection (dpi). DETs, PSAP and STT3A, with NMD have important functions under systemic APEC infection. DETs, CDC45, CDK1, RAG2, POLR1B, PSAP, and DNASE1L3, from the same transcription start sites (TSS) indicate that cell death, cell cycle, cellular function, and maintenance were predominant in host under systemic APEC.ConclusionsWith the use of RNAseq technology and bioinformatics tools, this study provides a portrait of the AS event and NMD in primary lymphoid tissues, which play critical roles in host homeostasis under systemic APEC infection. According to this study, AS plays a pivotal regulatory role in the immune response in chicken under systemic APEC infection via either NMD or alternative TSSs. This study elucidates the regulatory role of AS for the immune complex under systemic APEC infection.

Highlights

  • Avian pathogenic E. coli (APEC) can lead to a loss in millions of dollars in poultry annually because of mortality and produce contamination

  • These results showed that more spliced reads were detected in the bone marrow than in the bursa and the thymus

  • This study provides a comprehensive description of the whole transcriptomic alternative splicing (AS) changes and non-sense mediated decay (NMD) in the primary lymphoid tissues of resistant and non-challenged birds compared with susceptible birds by using RNAseq data analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Avian pathogenic E. coli (APEC) can lead to a loss in millions of dollars in poultry annually because of mortality and produce contamination. Studies have verified that many immune-related genes undergo changes in alternative splicing (AS), along with nonsense mediated decay (NMD), to regulate the immune system under different conditions. Avian pathogenic E. coli (APEC) can cause numerous diseases, such as colibacillosis, septicemia, pericarditis, and airsacculitis, leading to significant economic loss in the poultry industry because of mortality and produce contamination [1, 2]. Studies have demonstrated that numerous immunerelated genes are undergoing changes in alternative splicing (AS) to regulate the immune system under different conditions [6, 7], such as CD3, CTLA4, CD44, FYN, and VAV1 [6,7,8,9,10]. Studying the two major sources of transcriptome diversity - differential splicing and NMD - is critical to understanding the mechanisms of AS and its regulation among different conditions, uncovering structural and functional diversity

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