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Acta Prataculturae Sinica ›› 2023, Vol. 32 ›› Issue (10): 173-186.DOI: 10.11686/cyxb2022449

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Screening of target genes related to milk fat in dairy cows regulated by alfalfa miR168b

Jing-ying JIA1,2(), Bao-bao LIU1,2, Yun MA1,2, Hong-juan DUAN1,2, Xiao-yan CAI1,2()   

  1. 1.School of Agricultural,Ningxia University,Yinchuan 750021,China
    2.Key Laboratory of Ruminant Molecular Cell Breeding,Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region,Yinchuan 750021,China
  • Received:2022-11-14 Revised:2023-02-21 Online:2023-10-20 Published:2023-07-26
  • Contact: Xiao-yan CAI

Abstract:

The alfalfa (Medicago sativa) miRNAs expressed significantly differently in the blood and milk of high-fat dairy cows and low-fat dairy cows and their potential target genes in dairy cows were screened out in order to lay a foundation for further exploring the regulation of milk fat level by alfalfa miRNAs at gene level. Firstly, the level of dairy herd improvement (DHI) was measured in milk of Holstein cows which had produced 4 fetuses and had the same dietary level. Three cows were selected from high-and low-milk-fat cows as duplicates and RT-qPCR was used to quantify alfalfa miRNAs in milk and blood of the dairy cows. After screening out differentially expressed miRNAs, the target genes were predicted and analyzed, and the target genes related to milk fat metabolism were screened according to the binding sites and quantitative results by miRNA-mRNA. The results were as follows: 1) Three high-fat dairy cows and three low-fat dairy cows were identified by their DHI score. The fat content in the milk of high-fat dairy cows was >4.2%, and that of low-fat dairy cows was <3.5%. 2) Alfalfa sourced novel-miR54, miR156f, miR166a, miR168b and miR168c-3p were detected in cow blood and milk. The expression level of miR168b in the blood of high-fat milk cows was extremely significantly lower than that in low-fat milk cows (P<0.01), and similarly the expression level of miR168b in the milk of high-fat milk cows was significantly lower than that in low-fat milk cows (P<0.05). 3) The high expression of mtr-miR168b in mammary epithelial cells inhibited the expression of adipogenic marker genes PPARγSCD1CEBP/β and SREBP1. 4) GO and KEGG databases indicated 1834 and 296 target genes, respectively, predicted by mtr-miR168b. The predicted target genes were closely related to N-glycan biosynthesis (3.72%), the cGMP-PKG signaling pathway (2.37%) and vascular smooth muscle contraction (2.37%) and the glycerophosphate metabolism pathway (1.69%) was also significantly enriched. 5) CPT1A and STARD7, two genes closely related to lipid metabolism, were also screened. A targeting relationship between miR-168b and CPT1A was confirmed by dual-luciferase report. In conclusion, mtr-miR168b can regulate milk fat production by inhibiting the expression of adipogenic marker genes in mammary epithelial cells, and this study identifies target genes for further verification of alfalfa miRNA regulation of milk fat percentage in dairy cows.

Key words: Holstein cow, cross-kingdom regulation, mtr-miR168b, milk fat, target gene