Abstract

Tibetan pigs are native mammalian species on the Tibetan Plateau that have evolved distinct physiological traits that allow them to tolerate high-altitude hypoxic environments. However, the genetic mechanism underlying this adaptation remains elusive. Here, based on multitissue transcriptional data from high-altitude Tibetan pigs and low-altitude Rongchang pigs, we performed a weighted correlation network analysis (WGCNA) and identified key modules related to these tissues. Complex network analysis and bioinformatics analysis were integrated to identify key genes and three-node network motifs. We found that among the six tissues (muscle, liver, heart, spleen, kidneys, and lungs), lung tissue may be the key organs for Tibetan pigs to adapt to hypoxic environment. In the lung tissue of Tibetan pigs, we identified KLF4, BCL6B, EGR1, EPAS1, SMAD6, SMAD7, KDR, ATOH8, and CCN1 genes as potential regulators of hypoxia adaption. We found that KLF4 and EGR1 genes might simultaneously regulate the BCL6B gene, forming a KLF4–EGR1–BCL6B complex. This complex, dominated by KLF4, may enhance the hypoxia tolerance of Tibetan pigs by mediating the TGF-β signaling pathway. The complex may also affect the PI3K-Akt signaling pathway, which plays an important role in angiogenesis caused by hypoxia. Therefore, we postulate that the KLF4–EGR1–BCL6B complex may be beneficial for Tibetan pigs to survive better in the hypoxia environments. Although further molecular experiments and independent large-scale studies are needed to verify our findings, these findings may provide new details of the regulatory architecture of hypoxia-adaptive genes and are valuable for understanding the genetic mechanism of hypoxic adaptation in mammals.

Highlights

  • Hypoxia is a significant environmental characteristic of high altitude, which exerts a marked impact on biological organisms and imposes extreme physiological challenges in mammals

  • After performing weighted correlation network analysis (WGCNA), we found that KLF4, BCL6B, EPAS1, SMAD6, and SMAD7 were clustered into key modules related to the yak lungs

  • Differential expression, and tissue-specific expression, we identified a list of genes that may be related to hypoxia in Tibetan pig lung tissue, such as EPAS1, LOXL1, KLF4, EGR1, BCL6B, SMAD6, SMAD7, KDR, MMP23B, and miR-296

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Summary

Introduction

Hypoxia is a significant environmental characteristic of high altitude, which exerts a marked impact on biological organisms and imposes extreme physiological challenges in mammals. Physiological studies showed that Tibetan pigs have evolved physiological adaptations to high-altitude hypoxia, such as a thicker alveolar septum with more highly developed capillaries (Ma et al, 2019) and a larger and strong heart (Li et al, 2013). They represent a suitable animal model for exploring the molecular mechanism of hypoxia adaptation in high-altitude organisms. The most detailed solution to the missing heritability problem would involve identifying all causal genetic variants (Young, 2019) and exploring related gene networks that have facilitated high-altitude adaptation of Tibetan pigs

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