Background
RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) has allowed for transcriptional profiling of biological systems through identification of differentially expressed (DE) genes and pathways.
Results
A total of 80 steers were selected from the multibreed Angus-Brahman herd of the University of Florida. Sensory panel tenderness, juiciness and connective tissue as well as marbling, WBSF and cooking loss were assessed in longissimus dorsi muscle. Nuclear RNA was extracted from muscle and an RNA-seq library for each sample was constructed, multiplexed, and sequenced based on protocols by Illumina HiSeq 3000 PE100 platform to generate 2 × 101 bp paired-end reads. On average, 34.9 million high-quality paired reads were uniquely mapped to the Btau_4.6.1 reference genome and a total of 8,799 genes were analyzed. Including all 80 animals, gene and exon expression analysis was carried out using a meat quality index as a continuous response variable. The expression of 208 genes and 3,280 exons from 1,565 genes was associated with the meat quality index (p-value ≤ 0.05). Out of the 80 samples sequenced, 40 animals with extreme low and high WBSF, tenderness and marbling values were selected for a differential expression (DE) analysis for gene and isoforms. A total of 676 (adjusted p-value ≤ 0.05), 70 (adjusted p-value ≤ 0.1) and 198 (adjusted p-value ≤ 0.1) genes were DE for WBSF, tenderness and marbling, respectively. A total of 106 isoforms from 98 genes for WBSF, 13 isoforms from 13 genes for tenderness and 43 isoforms from 42 genes for marbling (FDR ≤ 0.1) were DE.
Conclusion
A number of cytoskeletal and transmembrane anchoring related genes and pathways were identified in the expression, DE and gene enrichment analyses, and these proteins can have a direct effect on meat quality. Cytoskeletal proteins and transmembrane anchoring molecules can influence meat quality by allowing cytoskeletal filament interaction with myocyte and organelle membranes, contributing to cytoskeletal structure, microtubule network stability, and cellular architecture maintenance during the postmortem.