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Liver Transcriptome Response to Heat Stress in Beijing You Chickens and Guang Ming Broilers

Heat stress is one of the most prevalent issues in poultry production that reduces performance, robustness, and economic gains. Previous studies have demonstrated that native chickens are more tolerant of heat than commercial breeds. However, the underlying mechanisms of the heat tolerance observed...

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Autores principales: Barreto Sánchez, Astrid Lissette, Wang, Qiao, Thiam, Mamadou, Wang, Zixuan, Zhang, Jin, Zhang, Qi, Zhang, Na, Li, Qinghe, Wen, Jie, Zhao, Guiping
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8953548/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35327970
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes13030416
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author Barreto Sánchez, Astrid Lissette
Wang, Qiao
Thiam, Mamadou
Wang, Zixuan
Zhang, Jin
Zhang, Qi
Zhang, Na
Li, Qinghe
Wen, Jie
Zhao, Guiping
author_facet Barreto Sánchez, Astrid Lissette
Wang, Qiao
Thiam, Mamadou
Wang, Zixuan
Zhang, Jin
Zhang, Qi
Zhang, Na
Li, Qinghe
Wen, Jie
Zhao, Guiping
author_sort Barreto Sánchez, Astrid Lissette
collection PubMed
description Heat stress is one of the most prevalent issues in poultry production that reduces performance, robustness, and economic gains. Previous studies have demonstrated that native chickens are more tolerant of heat than commercial breeds. However, the underlying mechanisms of the heat tolerance observed in native chicken breeds remain unelucidated. Therefore, we performed a phenotypical, physiological, liver transcriptome comparative analysis and WGCNA in response to heat stress in one native (Beijing You, BY) and one commercial (Guang Ming, GM) chicken breed. The objective of this study was to evaluate the heat tolerance and identify the potential driver and hub genes related to heat stress in these two genetically distinct chicken breeds. In brief, 80 BY and 60 GM, 21 days old chickens were submitted to a heat stress experiment for 5 days (33 °C, 8 h/day). Each breed was divided into experimental groups of control (Ctl) and heat stress (HS). The results showed that BY chickens were less affected by heat stress and displayed reduced DEGs than GM chickens, 365 DEGs and 382 DEGs, respectively. The transcriptome analysis showed that BY chickens exhibited enriched pathways related to metabolism activity, meanwhile GM chickens’ pathways were related to inflammatory reactions. CPT1A and ANGPTL4 for BY chickens, and HSP90B1 and HSPA5 for GM chickens were identified as potential candidate genes associated with HS. The WGCNA revealed TLR7, AR, BAG3 genes as hub genes, which could play an important role in HS. The results generated in this study provide valuable resources for studying liver transcriptome in response to heat stress in native and commercial chicken lines.
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spelling pubmed-89535482022-03-26 Liver Transcriptome Response to Heat Stress in Beijing You Chickens and Guang Ming Broilers Barreto Sánchez, Astrid Lissette Wang, Qiao Thiam, Mamadou Wang, Zixuan Zhang, Jin Zhang, Qi Zhang, Na Li, Qinghe Wen, Jie Zhao, Guiping Genes (Basel) Article Heat stress is one of the most prevalent issues in poultry production that reduces performance, robustness, and economic gains. Previous studies have demonstrated that native chickens are more tolerant of heat than commercial breeds. However, the underlying mechanisms of the heat tolerance observed in native chicken breeds remain unelucidated. Therefore, we performed a phenotypical, physiological, liver transcriptome comparative analysis and WGCNA in response to heat stress in one native (Beijing You, BY) and one commercial (Guang Ming, GM) chicken breed. The objective of this study was to evaluate the heat tolerance and identify the potential driver and hub genes related to heat stress in these two genetically distinct chicken breeds. In brief, 80 BY and 60 GM, 21 days old chickens were submitted to a heat stress experiment for 5 days (33 °C, 8 h/day). Each breed was divided into experimental groups of control (Ctl) and heat stress (HS). The results showed that BY chickens were less affected by heat stress and displayed reduced DEGs than GM chickens, 365 DEGs and 382 DEGs, respectively. The transcriptome analysis showed that BY chickens exhibited enriched pathways related to metabolism activity, meanwhile GM chickens’ pathways were related to inflammatory reactions. CPT1A and ANGPTL4 for BY chickens, and HSP90B1 and HSPA5 for GM chickens were identified as potential candidate genes associated with HS. The WGCNA revealed TLR7, AR, BAG3 genes as hub genes, which could play an important role in HS. The results generated in this study provide valuable resources for studying liver transcriptome in response to heat stress in native and commercial chicken lines. MDPI 2022-02-25 /pmc/articles/PMC8953548/ /pubmed/35327970 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes13030416 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Barreto Sánchez, Astrid Lissette
Wang, Qiao
Thiam, Mamadou
Wang, Zixuan
Zhang, Jin
Zhang, Qi
Zhang, Na
Li, Qinghe
Wen, Jie
Zhao, Guiping
Liver Transcriptome Response to Heat Stress in Beijing You Chickens and Guang Ming Broilers
title Liver Transcriptome Response to Heat Stress in Beijing You Chickens and Guang Ming Broilers
title_full Liver Transcriptome Response to Heat Stress in Beijing You Chickens and Guang Ming Broilers
title_fullStr Liver Transcriptome Response to Heat Stress in Beijing You Chickens and Guang Ming Broilers
title_full_unstemmed Liver Transcriptome Response to Heat Stress in Beijing You Chickens and Guang Ming Broilers
title_short Liver Transcriptome Response to Heat Stress in Beijing You Chickens and Guang Ming Broilers
title_sort liver transcriptome response to heat stress in beijing you chickens and guang ming broilers
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8953548/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35327970
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes13030416
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