Identification of an intronic regulatory mutation at the buffalo αS1-casein gene that triggers the skipping of exon 6.

Mol Biol Rep

Department of Biotechnology, Faculty of Animal Husbandry and Biotechnology, University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine Cluj-Napoca, 3-5 Manastur Road, 400372, Cluj-Napoca, Romania.

Published: July 2013

The characterization of casein polymorphism is an essential step in order to understand the genetic basis of milk quality in dairy ruminants. In this work, we report the identification of a regulatory mutation at the buffalo αs1-casein (CSN1S1) gene that alters the normal processing of the primary transcript. Sequencing of CSN1S1 cDNA from individuals harbouring this new variant revealed that its most distinctive feature is the loss of exon 6 that encodes eight amino acids between positions 35-42 of mature protein. In an effort to map the causal mutation, we sequenced a genomic region spanning exons 5-7 of the buffalo CSN1S1 gene. This experiment allowed us to establish that exon 6-skipping is produced by a G to C substitution at the first position of intron 6 that inactivates the donor splice site. This mutation can be typed by PCR-RFLP by using either TaaI or Bpu10I diagnostic restriction enzymes, and it has a frequency of 0.18 in Romanian buffaloes. This exon skipping phenomenon is the first one described in buffalo CSN1S1 locus.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11033-013-2518-2DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

regulatory mutation
8
mutation buffalo
8
buffalo αs1-casein
8
csn1s1 gene
8
buffalo csn1s1
8
identification intronic
4
intronic regulatory
4
mutation
4
buffalo
4
αs1-casein gene
4

Similar Publications

Unlabelled: APOBEC3 proteins (A3s) play an important role in host innate immunity against viruses and DNA mutations in cancer. A3s-induced mutations in both viral and human DNA genomes vary significantly from non-lethal mutations in viruses to localized hypermutations, such as kataegis in cancer. How A3s are regulated remains largely unknown.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unlabelled: has numerous two-component signaling systems (TCSs), many of which regulate the complex social behaviors of this soil bacterium. A subset of TCSs consists of NtrC-like response regulators (RRs) and their cognate histidine sensor kinases (SKs). We have previously demonstrated that a multi-component, phosphorelay TCS named NmpRSTU plays a role in social motility.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The RNA chaperone Hfq plays crucial roles in bacterial gene expression and is a major facilitator of small regulatory RNA (sRNA) action. The toroidal architecture of the Hfq hexamer presents three well-characterized surfaces that allow it to bind sRNAs to stabilize them and engage target transcripts. Hfq-interacting sRNAs are categorized into two classes based on the surfaces they use to bind Hfq.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unlabelled: Immune escape is a critical hallmark of cancer progression and underlies resistance to multiple immunotherapies. However, it remains unclear when the genetic events associated with immune escape occur during cancer development. Here, we integrate functional genomics studies of immunomodulatory genes with a tumor evolution reconstruction approach to infer the evolution of immune escape across 38 cancer types from the Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes dataset.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: For patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), failure of definitive radiation combined with cisplatin nearly universally results in death. Although hyperactivation of the Nrf2 pathway can drive radiation and cisplatin resistance along with suppressed anti-tumor immunity, treatment-refractory HNSCC tumors may retain sensitivity to targeted agents secondary to synergistic lethality with other oncogenic drivers (e.g.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!