Abstract

BackgroundGrowth regulation is a complex process influenced by genetic and environmental factors. We examined differences between growth hormone (GH) transgenic (T) and non-transgenic (NT) coho salmon to elucidate whether the same loci were involved in controlling body size and gene expression phenotypes, and to assess whether physiological transformations occurring from GH transgenesis were under the influence of alternative pathways. The following genomic techniques were used to explore differences between size classes within and between transgenotypes (T vs. NT): RNA-Seq/Differentially Expressed Gene (DEG) analysis, quantitative PCR (qPCR) and OpenArray analysis, Genotyping-by-Sequencing, and Genome-Wide Association Study (GWAS).ResultsDEGs identified in comparisons between the large and small tails of the size distributions of T and NT salmon (NTLarge, NTSmall, TLarge and TSmall) spanned a broad range of biological processes, indicating wide-spread influence of the transgene on gene expression. Overexpression of growth hormone led to differences in regulatory loci between transgenotypes and size classes. Expression levels were significantly greater in T fish at 16 of 31 loci and in NT fish for 10 loci. Eleven genes exhibited different mRNA levels when the interaction of size and transgenotype was considered (IGF1, IGFBP1, GH, C3–4, FAS, FAD6, GLUT1, G6PASE1, GOGAT, MID1IP1). In the GWAS, 649 unique SNPs were significantly associated with at least one study trait, with most SNPs associated with one of the following traits: C3_4, ELA1, GLK, IGF1, IGFBP1, IGFII, or LEPTIN. Only 1 phenotype-associated SNP was found in common between T and NT fish, and there were no SNPs in common between transgenotypes when size was considered.ConclusionsMultiple regulatory loci affecting gene expression were shared between fast-growing and slow-growing fish within T or NT groups, but no such regulatory loci were found to be shared between NT and T groups. These data reveal how GH overexpression affects the regulatory responses of the genome resulting in differences in growth, physiological pathways, and gene expression in T fish compared with the wild type. Understanding the complexity of regulatory gene interactions to generate phenotypes has importance in multiple fields ranging from applications in selective breeding to quantifying influences on evolutionary processes.

Highlights

  • Growth regulation is a complex process influenced by genetic and environmental factors

  • In order to more directly examine if genetic background affects the phenotypic outcomes of growth hormone (GH) transgenesis, and whether such influences affect phenotype in non-transgenic (NT) and GH transgenic (T) siblings in the same or distinct ways, we identified differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between fish size classes within both T and NT salmon

  • Here, we examined the impact of GH transgenesis in coho salmon relative to wild type, and have assessed genomic influences between large vs. small fish in NT and T genotypes

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Summary

Introduction

Growth regulation is a complex process influenced by genetic and environmental factors. We examined differences between growth hormone (GH) transgenic (T) and non-transgenic (NT) coho salmon to elucidate whether the same loci were involved in controlling body size and gene expression phenotypes, and to assess whether physiological transformations occurring from GH transgenesis were under the influence of alternative pathways. Growth regulation is a complex process influenced by genetic, cellular and environmental factors. Growth is mediated primarily via the growth hormone (GH)/insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) pathway [5, 6], and introduction of a GH construct in some species has resulted in greater than 30fold increases in the size-at-age of transgenic fish [1, 7, 8], with more modest gains in other species [9]. Effects of GH overexpression, relative to wild type, have been found to be highly influenced by environmental conditions and by genotype by environment interactions [13, 14]

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