Peeling Back the Evolutionary Layers of Molecular Mechanisms Responsive to Exercise-Stress in the Skeletal Muscle of the Racing Horse

Heebal Kim(Seoul National University), Taeheon Lee(Seoul National University), Woong‐Yang Park(Seoul National University), Jin Woo Lee(New Generation University College), Jinhyun Kim(Seoul National University), B.-Y. Lee(Education Authority), Hyeonju Ahn(Education Authority), Sunjin Moon(Education Authority), Soo Ick Cho(Seoul National University), Kyong-Tak Do(Pusan National University), Heui‐Soo Kim(Pusan National University), Hyoki Lee(Konkuk University), C.-K. Lee(Seoul National University), Hoyoul Kong(Konkuk University), Yu‐Chan Yang(Konkuk University), Jongsun Park(Genome Research Foundation), Hak‐Min Kim(Genome Research Foundation), B. C. Kim(Genome Research Foundation), S.‐H. Hwang(Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology), Jong Bhak(Roslin Institute), David W. Burt(University of Edinburgh), K.-D. Park(Hankyong National University), B.-W. Cho(Pusan National University), Heebal Kim(Seoul National University)
DNA Research
April 11, 2013
Cited by 25Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The modern horse (Equus caballus) is the product of over 50 million yrs of evolution. The athletic abilities of the horse have been enhanced during the past 6000 yrs under domestication. Therefore, the horse serves as a valuable model to understand the physiology and molecular mechanisms of adaptive responses to exercise. The structure and function of skeletal muscle show remarkable plasticity to the physical and metabolic challenges following exercise. Here, we reveal an evolutionary layer of responsiveness to exercise-stress in the skeletal muscle of the racing horse. We analysed differentially expressed genes and their co-expression networks in a large-scale RNA-sequence dataset comparing expression before and after exercise. By estimating genome-wide dN/dS ratios using six mammalian genomes, and FST and iHS using re-sequencing data derived from 20 horses, we were able to peel back the evolutionary layers of adaptations to exercise-stress in the horse. We found that the oldest and thickest layer (dN/dS) consists of system-wide tissue and organ adaptations. We further find that, during the period of horse domestication, the older layer (FST) is mainly responsible for adaptations to inflammation and energy metabolism, and the most recent layer (iHS) for neurological system process, cell adhesion, and proteolysis.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis