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A bioinformatic search for correspondence between differentially expressed genes of domestic versus wild animals and orthologous human genes altering reproductive potential

One of the greatest achievements of genetics in the 20th century is D.K. Belyaev’s discovery of destabilizing selection during the domestication of animals and that this selection affects only gene expression regulation (not gene structure) and inf luences systems of neuroendocrine control of ontoge...

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Autores principales: Ponomarenko, M.P., Chadaeva, I.V., Ponomarenko, P.M., Bogomolov, A.G., Oshchepkov, D.Yu., Sharypova, E.B., Suslov, V.V., Osadchuk, A.V., Osadchuk, L.V., Matushkin, Yu.G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Federal Research Center Institute of Cytology and Genetics of Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8894618/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35342855
http://dx.doi.org/10.18699/VJGB-22-13
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author Ponomarenko, M.P.
Chadaeva, I.V.
Ponomarenko, P.M.
Bogomolov, A.G.
Oshchepkov, D.Yu.
Sharypova, E.B.
Suslov, V.V.
Osadchuk, A.V.
Osadchuk, L.V.
Matushkin, Yu.G.
author_facet Ponomarenko, M.P.
Chadaeva, I.V.
Ponomarenko, P.M.
Bogomolov, A.G.
Oshchepkov, D.Yu.
Sharypova, E.B.
Suslov, V.V.
Osadchuk, A.V.
Osadchuk, L.V.
Matushkin, Yu.G.
author_sort Ponomarenko, M.P.
collection PubMed
description One of the greatest achievements of genetics in the 20th century is D.K. Belyaev’s discovery of destabilizing selection during the domestication of animals and that this selection affects only gene expression regulation (not gene structure) and inf luences systems of neuroendocrine control of ontogenesis in a stressful environment. Among the experimental data generalized by Belyaev’s discovery, there are also f indings about accelerated extinc tion of testes’ hormonal function and disrupted seasonality of reproduction of domesticated foxes in comparison with their wild congeners. To date, Belyaev’s discovery has already been repeatedly conf irmed, for example, by independent observations during deer domestication, during the use of rats as laboratory animals, after the reintroduction of endangered species such as Przewalski’s horse, and during the creation of a Siberian reserve population of the Siberian grouse when it had reached an endangered status in natural habitats. A genome-wide comparison among humans, several domestic animals, and some of their wild congeners has given rise to the concept of self-domestication syndrome, which includes autism spectrum disorders. In our previous study, we created a bioinformatic model of human self-domestication syndrome using differentially expressed genes (DEGs; of domestic animals versus their wild congeners) orthologous to the human genes (mainly, nervous-system genes) whose changes in expression affect reproductive potential, i. e., growth of the number of humans in the absence of restrictions caused by limiting factors. Here, we applied this model to 68 human genes whose changes in expression alter the reproductive health of women and men and to 3080 DEGs of domestic versus wild animals. As a result, in domestic animals, we identif ied 16 and 4 DEGs, the expression changes of which are codirected with changes in the expression of the human orthologous genes decreasing and increasing human reproductive potential, respectively. The wild animals had 9 and 11 such DEGs, respectively. This difference between domestic and wild animals was signif icant according to Pearson’s χ2 test (p < 0.05) and Fisher’s exact test (p < 0.05). We discuss the results from the standpoint of restoration of endangered animal species whose natural habitats are subject to an anthropogenic impact.
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spelling pubmed-88946182022-03-24 A bioinformatic search for correspondence between differentially expressed genes of domestic versus wild animals and orthologous human genes altering reproductive potential Ponomarenko, M.P. Chadaeva, I.V. Ponomarenko, P.M. Bogomolov, A.G. Oshchepkov, D.Yu. Sharypova, E.B. Suslov, V.V. Osadchuk, A.V. Osadchuk, L.V. Matushkin, Yu.G. Vavilovskii Zhurnal Genet Selektsii Original Article One of the greatest achievements of genetics in the 20th century is D.K. Belyaev’s discovery of destabilizing selection during the domestication of animals and that this selection affects only gene expression regulation (not gene structure) and inf luences systems of neuroendocrine control of ontogenesis in a stressful environment. Among the experimental data generalized by Belyaev’s discovery, there are also f indings about accelerated extinc tion of testes’ hormonal function and disrupted seasonality of reproduction of domesticated foxes in comparison with their wild congeners. To date, Belyaev’s discovery has already been repeatedly conf irmed, for example, by independent observations during deer domestication, during the use of rats as laboratory animals, after the reintroduction of endangered species such as Przewalski’s horse, and during the creation of a Siberian reserve population of the Siberian grouse when it had reached an endangered status in natural habitats. A genome-wide comparison among humans, several domestic animals, and some of their wild congeners has given rise to the concept of self-domestication syndrome, which includes autism spectrum disorders. In our previous study, we created a bioinformatic model of human self-domestication syndrome using differentially expressed genes (DEGs; of domestic animals versus their wild congeners) orthologous to the human genes (mainly, nervous-system genes) whose changes in expression affect reproductive potential, i. e., growth of the number of humans in the absence of restrictions caused by limiting factors. Here, we applied this model to 68 human genes whose changes in expression alter the reproductive health of women and men and to 3080 DEGs of domestic versus wild animals. As a result, in domestic animals, we identif ied 16 and 4 DEGs, the expression changes of which are codirected with changes in the expression of the human orthologous genes decreasing and increasing human reproductive potential, respectively. The wild animals had 9 and 11 such DEGs, respectively. This difference between domestic and wild animals was signif icant according to Pearson’s χ2 test (p < 0.05) and Fisher’s exact test (p < 0.05). We discuss the results from the standpoint of restoration of endangered animal species whose natural habitats are subject to an anthropogenic impact. The Federal Research Center Institute of Cytology and Genetics of Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences 2022-02 /pmc/articles/PMC8894618/ /pubmed/35342855 http://dx.doi.org/10.18699/VJGB-22-13 Text en Copyright © AUTHORS https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
spellingShingle Original Article
Ponomarenko, M.P.
Chadaeva, I.V.
Ponomarenko, P.M.
Bogomolov, A.G.
Oshchepkov, D.Yu.
Sharypova, E.B.
Suslov, V.V.
Osadchuk, A.V.
Osadchuk, L.V.
Matushkin, Yu.G.
A bioinformatic search for correspondence between differentially expressed genes of domestic versus wild animals and orthologous human genes altering reproductive potential
title A bioinformatic search for correspondence between differentially expressed genes of domestic versus wild animals and orthologous human genes altering reproductive potential
title_full A bioinformatic search for correspondence between differentially expressed genes of domestic versus wild animals and orthologous human genes altering reproductive potential
title_fullStr A bioinformatic search for correspondence between differentially expressed genes of domestic versus wild animals and orthologous human genes altering reproductive potential
title_full_unstemmed A bioinformatic search for correspondence between differentially expressed genes of domestic versus wild animals and orthologous human genes altering reproductive potential
title_short A bioinformatic search for correspondence between differentially expressed genes of domestic versus wild animals and orthologous human genes altering reproductive potential
title_sort bioinformatic search for correspondence between differentially expressed genes of domestic versus wild animals and orthologous human genes altering reproductive potential
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8894618/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35342855
http://dx.doi.org/10.18699/VJGB-22-13
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