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Influence of heat stress, sex and genetic groups on reference genes stability in muscle tissue of chicken

Quantitative RT-PCR is an important technique for assessing gene expression. However, a proper normalization of reference genes prior to expression analyses of target genes is necessary. The best normalizer is that gene which remains stable in all samples from different treatments. The aim of this s...

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Autores principales: Cedraz de Oliveira, Haniel, Pinto Garcia, Antonio Amandio, Gonzaga Gromboni, Juliana Gracielle, Vasconcelos Farias Filho, Ronaldo, Souza do Nascimento, Carlos, Arias Wenceslau, Amauri
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5411030/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28459824
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176402
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author Cedraz de Oliveira, Haniel
Pinto Garcia, Antonio Amandio
Gonzaga Gromboni, Juliana Gracielle
Vasconcelos Farias Filho, Ronaldo
Souza do Nascimento, Carlos
Arias Wenceslau, Amauri
author_facet Cedraz de Oliveira, Haniel
Pinto Garcia, Antonio Amandio
Gonzaga Gromboni, Juliana Gracielle
Vasconcelos Farias Filho, Ronaldo
Souza do Nascimento, Carlos
Arias Wenceslau, Amauri
author_sort Cedraz de Oliveira, Haniel
collection PubMed
description Quantitative RT-PCR is an important technique for assessing gene expression. However, a proper normalization of reference genes prior to expression analyses of target genes is necessary. The best normalizer is that gene which remains stable in all samples from different treatments. The aim of this study was to identify stable reference genes for normalization of target genes in muscle tissue from three genetically divergent chickens groups (Peloco, Cobb 500(®) and Caneluda) under environmental (heat stress and comfort) and sex influence. Expressions of ten reference genes were tested for stability in breast muscular tissue (Pectoralis major muscle). Samples were obtained from 36 males and females of two backyard breeds (Caneluda and Peloco) and one commercial line (Cobb 500(®)) under two environments. The heat stress and comfort temperature were 39 and 23°C, respectively. Animals were housed in the Animal Science Department at Universidade Estadual do Sudoeste da Bahia. We analyzed the expression data by four statistical tools (SLqPCR, NormFinder, Bestkeeper and Comparative CT). According to these tools, genes stability varied according to sex, genetic group and environment, however, some genes remained stable in all analyzes. There was no difference between the most stable genes for sex effect, being MRPS27 more stable for both males and females. In general, MRPS27 was the most stable gene. Within the three genetic groups, the most stable genes were RPL5, HMBS and EEF1 to Cobb 500(®), Peloco and Caneluda, respectively. Within the environment, the most stable gene under comfort and heat stress conditions was HMBS and MRPS27, respectively. BestKeeper and Comparative Ct were less correlated (28%) and SLqPCR and NormFinder were the most correlated (98%). MRPS27, RPL5 and MRPS30 genes were considered stable according the overall ranking and can be used as normalizer of relative expression of target genes in muscle tissue of chickens under heat stress.
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spelling pubmed-54110302017-05-12 Influence of heat stress, sex and genetic groups on reference genes stability in muscle tissue of chicken Cedraz de Oliveira, Haniel Pinto Garcia, Antonio Amandio Gonzaga Gromboni, Juliana Gracielle Vasconcelos Farias Filho, Ronaldo Souza do Nascimento, Carlos Arias Wenceslau, Amauri PLoS One Research Article Quantitative RT-PCR is an important technique for assessing gene expression. However, a proper normalization of reference genes prior to expression analyses of target genes is necessary. The best normalizer is that gene which remains stable in all samples from different treatments. The aim of this study was to identify stable reference genes for normalization of target genes in muscle tissue from three genetically divergent chickens groups (Peloco, Cobb 500(®) and Caneluda) under environmental (heat stress and comfort) and sex influence. Expressions of ten reference genes were tested for stability in breast muscular tissue (Pectoralis major muscle). Samples were obtained from 36 males and females of two backyard breeds (Caneluda and Peloco) and one commercial line (Cobb 500(®)) under two environments. The heat stress and comfort temperature were 39 and 23°C, respectively. Animals were housed in the Animal Science Department at Universidade Estadual do Sudoeste da Bahia. We analyzed the expression data by four statistical tools (SLqPCR, NormFinder, Bestkeeper and Comparative CT). According to these tools, genes stability varied according to sex, genetic group and environment, however, some genes remained stable in all analyzes. There was no difference between the most stable genes for sex effect, being MRPS27 more stable for both males and females. In general, MRPS27 was the most stable gene. Within the three genetic groups, the most stable genes were RPL5, HMBS and EEF1 to Cobb 500(®), Peloco and Caneluda, respectively. Within the environment, the most stable gene under comfort and heat stress conditions was HMBS and MRPS27, respectively. BestKeeper and Comparative Ct were less correlated (28%) and SLqPCR and NormFinder were the most correlated (98%). MRPS27, RPL5 and MRPS30 genes were considered stable according the overall ranking and can be used as normalizer of relative expression of target genes in muscle tissue of chickens under heat stress. Public Library of Science 2017-05-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5411030/ /pubmed/28459824 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176402 Text en © 2017 Cedraz de Oliveira et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cedraz de Oliveira, Haniel
Pinto Garcia, Antonio Amandio
Gonzaga Gromboni, Juliana Gracielle
Vasconcelos Farias Filho, Ronaldo
Souza do Nascimento, Carlos
Arias Wenceslau, Amauri
Influence of heat stress, sex and genetic groups on reference genes stability in muscle tissue of chicken
title Influence of heat stress, sex and genetic groups on reference genes stability in muscle tissue of chicken
title_full Influence of heat stress, sex and genetic groups on reference genes stability in muscle tissue of chicken
title_fullStr Influence of heat stress, sex and genetic groups on reference genes stability in muscle tissue of chicken
title_full_unstemmed Influence of heat stress, sex and genetic groups on reference genes stability in muscle tissue of chicken
title_short Influence of heat stress, sex and genetic groups on reference genes stability in muscle tissue of chicken
title_sort influence of heat stress, sex and genetic groups on reference genes stability in muscle tissue of chicken
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5411030/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28459824
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176402
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