Author/Authors :
Ganguly, Bhaskar Animal Biotechnology Center - Department of Veterinary Physiology and Biochemistry - College of Veterinary and Animal Sciences - G. B. Pant University of Agriculture and Technology - Pantnagar 263145 - India , Ambwani, Tanuj Kumar Animal Biotechnology Center - Department of Veterinary Physiology and Biochemistry - College of Veterinary and Animal Sciences - G. B. Pant University of Agriculture and Technology - Pantnagar 263145 - India , Rastogi, Sunil Kumar Animal Biotechnology Center - Department of Veterinary Physiology and Biochemistry - College of Veterinary and Animal Sciences - G. B. Pant University of Agriculture and Technology - Pantnagar 263145 - India
Abstract :
Milk fat is one of the most important economic traits in dairy animals. Yet, the biological machinery involved in milk fat synthesis remains poorly understood. In the present study, expression profiling of 45 genes involved in lipid biosynthesis and secretion was performed using a computational approach to identify those genes that are differentially expressed in mammary tissue. Transcript
abundance was observed for genes associated with nine bioprocesses, namely, fatty acid import into cells, xenobiotic and cholesterol
transport, acetate and fatty acid activation and intracellular transport, fatty acid synthesis and desaturation, triacylglycerol synthesis,
sphingolipid synthesis, lipid droplet formation, ketone body utilization, and regulation of transcription in mammary, skin, and
muscle tissue. Relative expression coefficient of the genes was derived based on the transcript abundance across the three tissue
types to determine the genes that were preferentially expressed during lactation. 13 genes (ACSS1, ACSS2, ADFP, CD36, FABP3,
FASN,GPAM,INSIG1, LPL, SCD5, SPTLC1, SREBF1, andXDH) showed higher expression in the mammary tissue of which 6 (ADFP,
FASN, GPAM, LPL, SREBF1, and XDH) showed higher expression during adulthood. Further, interaction networks were mapped for these genes to determine the nature of interactions and to identify the major genes in the milk fat biosynthesis and secretion pathways.
Keywords :
Electronic Northern Analysis , Genes , Modeling , Gene Networks Underlying Bovine , Milk Fat