Cellular Source and Mechanisms of High Transcriptome Complexity in the Mammalian Testis

Magali Soumillon(University of Lausanne), Anamaria Necşulea(University of Lausanne), Manuela Weier, David Brawand(University of Lausanne), Xiaolan Zhang(Broad Institute), Hongcang Gu(Broad Institute), Pauline Barthès(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Maria Kokkinaki(Georgetown University Medical Center), Serge Nef(University of Geneva), Andreas Gnirke(Broad Institute), Martin Dym(Georgetown University), Bernard de Massy(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Tarjei S. Mikkelsen(Broad Institute), Henrik Kaessmann(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics)
Cell Reports
June 1, 2013
Cited by 658Open Access
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Abstract

Understanding the extent of genomic transcription and its functional relevance is a central goal in genomics research. However, detailed genome-wide investigations of transcriptome complexity in major mammalian organs have been scarce. Here, using extensive RNA-seq data, we show that transcription of the genome is substantially more widespread in the testis than in other organs across representative mammals. Furthermore, we reveal that meiotic spermatocytes and especially postmeiotic round spermatids have remarkably diverse transcriptomes, which explains the high transcriptome complexity of the testis as a whole. The widespread transcriptional activity in spermatocytes and spermatids encompasses protein-coding and long noncoding RNA genes but also poorly conserves intergenic sequences, suggesting that it may not be of immediate functional relevance. Rather, our analyses of genome-wide epigenetic data suggest that this prevalent transcription, which most likely promoted the birth of new genes during evolution, is facilitated by an overall permissive chromatin in these germ cells that results from extensive chromatin remodeling.


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