Correlation of Coding and Non-Coding RNAs on the Fat Deposition of Yaks Under Different Feeding Systems
Lin Xiong, Jie Pei, Shaoke Guo, Mengli Cao, Zhiqiang Ding, Yandong Kang, Xiaoyun Wu, Xian Guo

TL;DR
This study explores how different types of RNAs influence fat deposition in yaks under grazing and stall feeding systems.
Contribution
The study identifies key RNA networks and signaling pathways involved in yak fat deposition under different feeding systems.
Findings
677 differentially expressed mRNAs and thousands of non-coding RNAs were identified in yak subcutaneous fat.
PPAR, PI3K–Akt, and cAMP signaling pathways are central to RNA-regulated fat deposition in yaks.
Specific RNA interactions like TCONS00042948 and NR4A3 may play critical roles in fat regulation.
Abstract
The yak is a classic grazing livestock species on the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau, and fat deposition is indispensable for its survival and metabolism. Coding and non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) play an important role in regulating fat deposition in livestock. In this study, the expression of mRNAs, lncRNAs, miRNAs, and circRNAs in the subcutaneous fat of yaks under grazing and stall feeding was measured using whole-transcriptome sequencing technology. A total of 677 differentially expressed (DE) mRNAs, 120 DE lncRNAs, 2216 DE circRNAs, and 15 DE miRNAs were identified, and their biological function was explored using Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) analyses. Co-expression RNA (ceRNA) networks between DE ncRNAs and DE mRNAs were further constructed, and the crucial RNAs and signal pathways regulating fat deposition in yaks were obtained. The effect of mRNAs and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer-related molecular mechanisms research · Circular RNAs in diseases · MicroRNA in disease regulation
