Introduction

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are evolutionary conserved, small (~22 nt) non-coding RNAs that are found in all metazoans and regulate diverse biological processes1,2,3,4,5. miRNAs regulate gene expression by base pairing with their target mRNAs, leading to mRNA cleavage or translational repression5,6. Hence, the identification of the protein-coding targets of miRNAs is crucial for understanding their biological function. Several computational methods (PicTar, Target-Scan and miRanda) have been developed for the prediction of miRNA targets6,7,8,9. Although these programs are valuable for guiding laboratory experiments, they lack sensitivity and specificity10,11. A clear correlation is known to exist between the expression patterns of miRNAs and their mRNA targets11,12,13 and miRNA-target relationship analysis has been increasingly used to identify potential interactions between microRNAs and mRNAs based on paired expression profiles14,15,16,17,18,19.

During muscle development, miRNAs play crucial regulatory roles20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29. For example, miR-1, miR-133 and miR-206 are specifically and abundantly expressed in muscle tissue and contribute to muscle development21,30,31,32,33,34,35. miR-1 and miR-133 are involved in myoblast proliferation and differentiation21,36,37 and miR-206 has also been shown to promote myoblast differentiation30,38. Our group reported that miR-148a could promote myogenic differentiation by repressing the ROCK139. The miRNAs represent a newly recognized level of regulation of gene expression mediating skeletal muscle development. However, the function of miRNAs in skeletal muscle development and phenotypic variance has remained largely unclear.

Prenatal skeletal muscle development (myogenesis) is an ideal paradigm for understanding the molecular basis of cell lineage establishment and differentiation into specialized structures40,41. Furthermore, prenatal skeletal muscle development influences postnatal muscle performance42,43. Accordingly, myogenesis has become an extensively studied process in animal models44. In the pig (Sus scrofa), two waves of muscle fiber formation occur over relatively long periods of time compared to other laboratory animals, making the pig a good animal model for studying myogenesis45. Postnatal muscle growth is determined by the total number of fibers (TNF), which is fixed before birth. Establishment of the TNF involves two major waves of fiber generation: a primary generation from 35 to approximately 60 days post coitus (dpc) and a secondary generation from approximately 54 to 90 dpc43. Hence, approximately 35, 60 and 90 dpc are considered the key time points in myogenesis that significantly contribute to postnatal phenotype variance in pigs46.

The pig is an important livestock animal and an ideal model for biomedical research due to its anatomical, physiological and genetic similarities to humans47,48,49,50,51,52. In addition, studies on pigs have aided our understanding of phenotypic variation and abundant phenotypic changes during long-term selection53. Therefore, the use of pigs as research animals benefits both biomedical research and animal agriculture46. Between different types of pigs (lean-, obese- and mini-types), there are significant differences in growth rate, muscle mass, meat quality and adult weight. Landrace pigs, which are a typical lean-type western breed, have been intensively selected over the past three decades for rapid, large and efficient accretion of muscle. Tongcheng pigs, which are a typical indigenous Chinese obese-type breed, have a markedly lower growth rate and higher fat content than lean-type western pig breeds. Wuzhishan pigs, which are a Chinese miniature breed, have been recognized as an attractive experimental animal for a wide range of research fields (adults weigh < 40 kg)54,55.

To explore molecular mechanism of prenatal muscle development in pigs, we integrated miRNA- and mRNA-paired expression profiling of prenatal skeletal muscle at 33, 65 and 90 dpc in Landrace (lean-type), Tongcheng (obese-type) and Wuzhishan (mini-type) pigs. We identified miRNAs and mRNAs that were differentially expressed during muscle development. Subsequently, we performed expression pattern and co-expression analysis of differentially expressed mRNA during prenatal skeletal muscle development in three breed pigs. And a mRNA-miRNA interaction study was also carried out using computational prediction and expression relationship analysis. Finally, 12 mRNAs and 3 miRNAs that were differentially expressed were validated by quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) and 5 predicted miRNA targets were validated via dual luciferase reporter or western blot assays.

Results

Identifying differentially expressed mRNAs and miRNAs

During prenatal skeletal muscle development, 1402, 912 and 1950 transcripts were differentially expressed (P < 0.05) in Landrace, Tongcheng and Wuzhishan pigs, respectively (Tables S1–3). We also identified 33, 18 and 67 differentially expressed miRNAs (P < 0.05) in Landrace, Tongcheng and Wuzhishan pigs, respectively (Tables S4–6). Most miRNAs were differentially expressed in one pig breed, but we found that nine miRNAs (miR-133b, miR-206, miR-202, miR-302b, miR-320, miR-500, miR-625, miR-665 and miR-700) were common to all three breeds. However, there were varied expression patterns for the muscle-specific miRNAs miR-133b and miR-206 in each breed. miR-133b was up-regulated in both Landrace and Tongcheng pigs, but down-regulated in Wuzhishan pigs. In Landrace pigs and Tongcheng pigs, miR-206 peaked at 90 dpc, but it peaked at 65 dpc in Wuzhishan pigs.

In addition, some miRNAs were differentially expressed in only one breed during myogenesis. For example, only miR-619 was differentially expressed in Landrace pigs, while miR-1 and miR-765 were differentially expressed in Tongcheng pigs. In Wuzhishan pigs, 32 miRNAs, including let-7b, let-7d and let-7i from the let-7 family, were differentially expressed during myogenesis. These miRNAs maybe significantly contribute to the characteristic muscle phenotype of each pig breed.

qPCR validation for miRNAs and mRNAs

We selected three miRNAs (miR-133b, miR-206 and miR-302b) and twelve mRNAs (IGF2, TPM3, COL15A1, CSRP3, LAMA2, LAMA3, LAMB2, UCHL1, FNDC1, FEZ2, FGL2 and IGFBP7) to validate our miRNA and mRNA microarray data by qPCR. As shown in Table 1, the qPCR results were in agreement with the miRNA microarray experiments (r = 0.7937, P < 0.001). miR-133b was up-regulated during myogenesis in both Landrace and Tongcheng pigs but down-regulated in Wuzhishan pigs. miR-206 was up-regulated in both Landrace and Tongcheng pigs and peaked at 65 dpc in Wuzhishan pigs. miR-302 was down-regulated in Landrace and Tongcheng pigs but up-regulated in Wuzhishan pigs. As shown in Table 2, both the qPCR and oligoarray data validated that COL15A1, IGF2, CSRP3, CSRP3, LAMA3, LAMB2, FEZ2, FGL2 and IGFBP7 were up-regulated, UCHL1 was down-regulated and FNDC1 peaked at 65 dpc in the three pig breeds; in addition, TMP3 was up-regulated in both Landrace and Wuzhishan pigs and peaked at 65 dpc in Tongcheng pigs. The relationship coefficient between the oligoarray and qPCR data was 0.7511 (P < 0.01). These findings indicated that our miRNA and mRNA microarray data reliably reveal differences in the myogenesis gene expression profiles of these three breeds.

Table 1 qPCR validation of three differentially expressed miRs in microarray data.
Table 2 qPCR validation of 12 differentially expressed genes in oligoarray data.

Co-expression analysis of mRNAs during skeletal muscle development

Genes with parallel expression pattern are usually involved in the similar biological functions and pathways56,57. To identify key regulatory genes and compare the differences in mRNA expression during muscle development of different breeds, we performed gene expression pattern analysis using STEM software. These expression patterns are shown graphically for each breed in Figure S1–3 for Landrace, Tongcheng and Wuzhishan pigs, respectively. The results showed that differentially expressed genes were significantly enriched in 7, 7 and 6 clusters for Landrace, Tongcheng and Wuzhishan pigs, respectively (P < 0.05).

Certain GO functional categories of genes were over-represented in a number of expression pattern clusters (Table 3). In Landrace, genes with up-regulated patterns in development were significantly enriched in cluster 15, 12, 11 and 13, the genes of each cluster were significantly involved in myofibril assembly, striated muscle contraction, muscle system process and vasculature development, respectively. Down-regulated genes were significantly enriched in cluster 0, 3 and 2, the genes of each cluster were mainly associated with DNA metabolic process, cell division and cytoskeleton organization, respectively. In Tongcheng pigs, genes with up-regulated patterns in development were significantly enriched in cluster 15, 13, 12 and 8. Of them, genes were significantly involved in striated muscle contraction, respiratory electron transport chain, negative regulation of biological process and cellular respiration, respectively. The down-regulated genes were significantly enriched in cluster 3, 7 and 2, we found that genes involved in cell division, actin-mediated cell contraction and protein polymerization were significantly enriched in these clusters. Comparing with Landrace and Tongcheng pigs, interestingly, Wuzhishan pigs exhibited significant differences in enriched expression patterns and GO categories of clusters. During skeletal muscle development, up-regulated genes were mainly enriched in cluster 11, 15 and 12 and significantly involved in signal transduction, energy reserve metabolic and somite development, respectively. Many genes exhibited a waved expression pattern (up-regulated from 33 to 65 dpc, than down-regulted from 65 to 90 dpc), these genes were mainly involved in single-organism organelle organization and enriched in cluster 14. We found that down-regulated genes were significantly enriched in cluster 4 and 1. Of them, genes were mainly associated with glucose metabolic process and generation of precursor metabolites and energy.

Table 3 The most significantly enriched GO term of clusters in each pig breed.

Subsequently, we focused on the top significantly clusters with up-regulated and down-regulated patterns. co-expression and interaction analysis were carried out based above genes. In Landrace pigs, we found some key regulators (k-core = 7) including muscle contraction genes (FXYD1, DES, TNNT3, CACNB1, CACNG1, GAMT and TMOD4) and myogenesis factor (TNNT3b, CAPN3, CAV3 and ITGB1BP2) in clusters 15 and 0 (Fig. 1). In Tongcheng pigs, three myogenesis-related genes (MAPK12, CAV3 and TAGLN3) were identified as key regulatory factors (k-core = 7) for prenatal skeletal muscle development in clusters 15 and 3 (Fig. 2). In Wuzhishan pigs, key regulators (k-core = 9) were significantly involved in the cell proliferation process (including BUB1B, GPC4, LGI1, IGF2, TP53, FES, PTN, MDK, CKS2, USP8, CDK9, CDK6, KLF10, PRKD1, DLG7, CSRP2 and HDGFRP3) and myogenesis (including TNXB, GDF8, TPM3, SRI, CSRP2, CHODL and TAGLN3) in cluster 11 and 4 (Fig. 3).

Figure 1
figure 1

Gene co-expression network in Landrace pigs.

Genes from cluster 15 and 0 were analyzed and identified by gene co-expression network with k-core algorithm. Cycle nodes represent genes, the size of nodes represents the power of the interrelation among the nodes and edges between two nodes represent interactions between genes. The higher k-core of a gene means the more central role it has within the network.

Figure 2
figure 2

Gene co-expression network in Tongcheng pigs.

Genes from cluster 15 and 3 were analyzed and identified by gene co-expression network with k-core algorithm. Cycle nodes represent genes, the size of nodes represents the power of the interrelation among the nodes and edges between two nodes represent interactions between genes. The higher k-core of a gene means the more central role it has within the network.

Figure 3
figure 3

Gene co-expression network in Wuzhishan pigs.

Genes from cluster 11 and 4 were analyzed and identified by gene co-expression network with k-core algorithm. Cycle nodes represent genes, the size of nodes represents the power of the interrelation among the nodes and edges between two nodes represent interactions between genes. The higher k-core of a gene means the more central role it has within the network.

miRNA-mRNA interaction analysis

In Landrace pigs

Using expression correlation and computational prediction, we identified 290 potential mRNA targets for 28 miRNAs based on paired miRNA and mRNA expression profiling (Table S4). The miRNA-mRNA interaction relationship for Landrace pigs is shown in Fig. 4. In Landrace pigs, 14 miRNAs (miR-608, miR-302b, miR-136, miR-625, miR-382, miR-207, miR-202, miR-619, let-7d, miR-376c, miR-665, miR-552, miR-697, miR-328 and miR-133b) were found to regulate 81.2% of the mRNA targets identified. Of these miRNAs, miR-608, miR-302b, miR-136 and miR-625 potentially targeted 52, 46, 36 and 36 mRNAs, respectively, indicating that these miRNAs likely contribute significantly to the regulation of mRNA expression during prenatal muscle development in Landrace pigs. miR-133b potentially targeted 12 mRNAs (ABCF2, ARID3A, ATOX1, C9orf19, EIF4A1, HPGD, NNAT, ODC1, SCP2, SMARCD1, SMC2 and SQLE). CKAP2, SFRS3, TPM3, YWHAB and YWHAQ were identified as targets of miR-206. We found that one miRNA can regulate multiple target mRNAs; one mRNA can also be regulated by multiple miRNAs. For example, the expression of CAV1, an isoform of the muscle-specific caveolin gene family58, was regulated by miR-136, miR-302b and miR-552. In addition, IGF2 (insulin-like growth factor 2), which is known to affect muscle growth in the pig59, was the target of both miR-552 and miR-625. Finally, expression of NPM1, which is involved in cell survival and proliferation during carcinogenesis60, was potentially modulated by miR-519d, miR-619 and miR-207.

Figure 4
figure 4

The miRNA-mRNA interaction based on correlation analysis of their expression during prenatal skeletal muscle development in Landrace pigs.

In Tongcheng pigs

In Tongcheng pigs, we identified 91 potential mRNA targets for 15 miRNAs involved in myogenesis (Table S5). Eight miRNAs (miR-765, miR-302b, miR-1, let-7a, miR-206, miR-500, miR-546 and miR-705) targeted 86.1% of the mRNAs in Tongcheng pigs. There were 22, 21, 10, 9 and 9 target mRNAs for miR-765, miR-302b, miR-1, let-7a and miR-206, respectively, suggesting that these miRNAs significantly contribute to prenatal skeletal muscle development in Tongcheng pigs. The target mRNAs of miR-1, 133b and 206 were identified in this study. As shown in Fig. 5, miR-1 potentially regulated 10 mRNAs, including C9orf19, DLG7, FKBP1B, GJA7, HMGCS1, MAP1A, NCALD, PCDH19, RAP2A and SFRP2. miR-133b potentially regulated 4 mRNAs (C9orf19, NAV1, NNAT and SQLE), while miR-206 potentially regulated C9orf19, CKAP2, CNN3, FKBP1B, HMGCS1, MAP1A, NCALD, SFRP2 and VCAN. The expression of C9orf19 was potentially regulated by miR-1, miR-133b, miR-206 and let-7a. FKBP1B and HMGCS1, which encode rate-limiting enzymes of the cholesterol synthesis pathway61, were potentially regulated by let-7a, miR-1 and miR-206. The SFRP2 gene, which plays an active role in embryogenesis, especially in muscle development62, was found to be a potential target of miR-1 and miR-206 in myogenesis in Tongcheng pigs.

Figure 5
figure 5

The miRNA-mRNA interaction based on correlation analysis of their expression during prenatal skeletal muscle development in Tongcheng pigs.

In Wuzhishan pigs

By combining mRNA-miRNA paired expression and computational prediction, we identified 502 potential mRNA targets for 57 miRNAs associated with myogenesis in Wuzhishan pigs (Table S6). The prediction result of mRNA-miRNA interaction is shown in Fig. 6. In Wuzhishan pigs, 31 miRNAs potentially regulated 85.69% of mRNAs differently expressed during prenatal skeletal muscle development. Of these mRNAs, more than half (51.07%) were potentially regulated by 11 miRNAs (let-7e, miR-519d, miR-552, miR-679, miR-487a, miR-685, miR-422a, miR-500, miR-648, miR-705 and miR-214). One miRNA was found to regulate multiple mRNAs. For example, let-7e, miR-519d, miR-552, miR-679 and miR-487 potentially targeted 77, 72, 58, 49 and 45 mRNAs, respectively. For miRNA-133b, we identified 15 potential mRNA targets (AKAP9, ANKRD29, CHCHD6, DUSP1, ELOVL1, FAM46A, GEM, GNG2, MACF1, NFAT5, PRCP, RAP2C, SCP2, SCRT2 and SPON2) in Wuzhishan pigs. Twenty-one mRNAs (ACTN1, AGPAT1, AMT, ANK1, C20orf186, CALM1, CCNJ, CXCL12, DHRS3, FOXO1A, IRS1, JTB, LDB3, LITAF, PGK1, RPIA, SARS, SLAMF8, TEAD1, TTR and UBE2D2) were potentially regulated by miR-206 in Wuzhishan pigs. The expression levels of CCNJ, CENTG3, POU2F2, PRX and TRIB1 were potentially regulated by 9 different miRNAs. We also found that CCNJ had potentially common target loci: let-7a, let-7b, let-7d, miR-198, miR-206, miR-207, miR-325, miR-370 and miR-697. Similarly, the dystrophin (DMD) gene, involved in Duchenne muscular dystrophy63, was potentially regulated by let-7a, let-7b, let-7d, miR-207 and miR-325. Finally, IGF2, which is up-regulated in myogenesis, was a potential target of let-7e, miR-552 and miR-648 in Wuzhishan pigs.

Figure 6
figure 6

The miRNA-mRNA interaction based on correlation analysis of their expression during prenatal skeletal muscle development in Wuzhishan pigs.

Validating mRNA targets for miRNAs

According to the miRNA-mRNA interaction analysis and the prediction results of TargetScan and PicTar, RAP2C and SMARCD1 were potential target genes of miR-133b and MAP1A, SFRS3 and CNN3 were potential target genes of miR-206 (Table 4). To further assess the validity of miRNA-mRNA interactions, we chose these potential mRNA targets for experimental validation in pig iliac endothelium cell lines (PIEC). We carried out dual luciferase assays to confirm the binding potentiality between miRNAs and mRNA targets. The luciferase activity of wild-type of RAP2C and SMARCD1 reporters co-transfected with miR-133b mimics was decreased 69.8% (P < 0.01) (Fig. 7A) and 56.3% (P < 0.01) (Fig. 7B) compared to that of the negative control, respectively. The luciferase activity of wild-type MAP1A, SFRS3 and CNN3 reporters co-transfected with miR-206 mimics was decreased 37.4% (P < 0.01) (Fig. 7C), 33.5% (P < 0.01) (Fig. 7D) and 47.3% (P < 0.01) (Fig. 7E), respectively, compared to the negative control mimics. Additionally, all of these repression were abrogated after mutating the putative binding sites of these targets genes (Fig. 7A–E). These results supported that ssc-miR-133b directly targeted the RAP2C and SMARCD1 3′UTR and ssc-miR-206b directly targeted the MAP1A, SFRS3 and CNN3 3′UTR. Moreover, western blot suggested that miR-206 repressed the expression of CNN3 at the protein level (Fig. 7F).

Table 4 Predicted results on miRNA regulation of target genes.
Figure 7
figure 7

Validation of miRNA-mRNA interactions involving RAP2C, SMARCD1, MAP1A, SFRS3 and CNN3 via dual luciferase reporter or western blot assay.

(A,B) Validating RAP2C and SMARCD1 as targets of miR-133b using a dual luciferase reporter assay. (CE) Validating MAP1A, SFRS3 and CNN3 as targets of miR-206 using a dual luciferase reporter assay. (F) Validating CNN3 as a target of miR-206 at the protein level using western blot.

Gene ontology (GO) annotation of potential targets for miRNA

To gain further insight into the biological processes potentially mediated by miRNAs in myogenesis, we analyzed the functional categories of target mRNAs by performing gene ontology (GO) analysis. In Landrace pigs, the high-enrichment GOs targeted by miRNAs included positive regulation of positive chemotaxis, negative regulation of translational initiation and oligopeptide transport (Fig. 8A). The miRNA targets that negatively regulate cell proliferation were CHEK1, TOB2, CDH13, CAV1, PRKRA, NPM1, IGFBP7, SESN1, GPC3, SKAP2 and BTG2, while the miRNA targets participating in muscle contraction were TRDN, TMOD4, CHRNG, DES, FKBP1B and FXYD1. As shown in Fig. 9, one miRNA could participate in several biological processes by targeting different mRNAs and one biological process could be associated with multiple miRNAs. For example, miR-133b was associated with the sterol biosynthetic process, the steroid biosynthetic process, transcription, cell transport, regulation of transcription for DNA-dependent and multicellular organismal development. We found that negative regulation of cell proliferation was associated with several miRNAs, including let-7d, miR-136, miR-202, miR-302b, miR-370, miR-487a, miR-519d, miR-552, miR-619, miR-625, miR-207 and miR-665.

Figure 8
figure 8

Significant GO categories of microRNA targets during prenatal skeletal muscle development of pigs.

(A) Landrace pigs; (B) Tongcheng pigs; (C) Wuzhishan pigs. The vertical axis is the GO category and the horizontal axis is GO enrichment.

Figure 9
figure 9

The miRNA-GO network during prenatal skeletal muscle development in Landrace pigs.

Red squares indicate miRNAs that regulate myogenesis by targeting mRNAs. The pearl blue background indicates biological processes associated with mRNAs regulated by miRNAs in myogenesis.

In Tongcheng pigs, significant GOs corresponding to miRNAs included negative regulation of epithelial cell differentiation, negative regulation of smooth muscle cell migration, nitric oxide homeostasis and positive regulation of fast-twitch skeletal muscle fiber contraction (Fig. 8B). Interestingly, miR-765 participates in muscle development by targeting ITGA7 and TAGLN3, which may be critical for differentiation and migration processes during myogenesis64. The miRNA-GO network analysis suggested that cell adhesion was regulated by six miRNAs (miR-1, miR-206, miR-302b, miR-625, miR-765 and miR-669c). miR-1 was associated with the sterol biosynthetic process, somitogenesis, muscle contraction, the cholesterol biosynthetic process and cell adhesion (Fig. 10).

Figure 10
figure 10

The miRNA-GO network during prenatal skeletal muscle development in Tongcheng pigs.

Red squares indicate miRNAs that regulate myogenesis by targeting mRNAs. The pearl blue background indicates biological processes associated with mRNAs regulated by miRNAs in myogenesis.

In Wuzhishan pigs, the significant GOs targeted by miRNAs in myogenesis included negative regulation of intracellular transport, early endosome to late endosome transport, glial cell migration and chondrocyte differentiation (Fig. 8C). We obtained the miRNA-GO network based on miRNA-mRNA interactions. As shown in Fig. 11, we found that cell division was associated with multiple miRNAs, including let-7e, miR-302b, miR-487a, miR-519d, miR-552, miR-207, miR-325, miR-346, miR-376c, miR-500, miR-679 and miR-770-3p. In addition, miR-206, miR-608, miR-325 and miR-762 were identified as regulators of glycolysis during prenatal skeletal muscle development. Finally, miR-133b was involved in the cell cycle, small GTPase-mediated signal transduction, cell adhesion, signal transduction, cell proliferation, the response to oxidative stress, regulation of transcription, DNA-dependent transcription from RNA polymerase II promoters and regulation of intracellular signaling cascades.

Figure 11
figure 11

The miRNA-GO network during prenatal skeletal muscle development in Wuzhishan pigs.

Red squares indicate miRNAs that regulate myogenesis by targeting mRNAs. The pearl blue background indicates biological processes associated with mRNAs regulated by miRNAs in myogenesis.

Discussion

miRNAs regulate gene expression by binding to the 3′-untranslated region (UTR) of the target mRNA. It is estimated that each miRNA regulates hundreds of different mRNAs and more than 60% of protein-coding genes are subject to miRNA regulation in the human genome. miRNAs directly regulate at least 30% of the genes in the human genome7,65. This fact suggests that miRNAs play an important role in gene expression for many biological processes. Thus, it is crucial to identify target mRNAs to understand the biological function of miRNAs. At present, however, it is difficult to identify miRNA-mRNA interactions15. In particular, the high false-positive rate (21–39%) of prediction programs is problematic, as it leads to laborious and time-consuming validation processes7,10,66. Additionally, computational prediction programs often return hundreds of mRNA targets for a given miRNA65. More recently, microarray-based techniques have been used to identify mRNA-miRNA interactions by determining negative expression correlations between miRNAs and their target mRNAs11,14,15,16,17,18,67,68. In this study, we carried out miRNA and mRNA paired expression profiling and then combined classical Pearson’s expression correlation analysis and computational programs to identify the miRNA-mRNA interactions potentiality during skeletal muscle development in three different breed pigs. This strategy significantly decreased the false-positive rate for identifying mRNA targets of miRNA. Using the Targetscan prediction program, for example, a total of 478, 435 and 478 mRNA targets were obtained for miR-1, miR-133 and miR-206, respectively. In this study, we identified only 10, 27 and 34 mRNA potential targets for miR-1, miR-133b and miR-206, respectively. A total of 732 potential mRNA targets were identified for 61 miRNAs expressed during prenatal skeletal muscle development in the pig. The number of target mRNAs ranged from 1 to 78 for a given miRNA and one mRNA was potentially regulated by 1–12 miRNAs. Additionally, we validated interaction potentiality above prediction results based on five potential mRNA targets selected (RAP2C and SMARCD1 for miR-133b, CNN3, MAP1A and SFRS3 for miR-206) by experimental method. Our study revealed that the strategy combining expression profiling and computational prediction is an effective means for discovering miRNA-mRNA interactions. This study provides information that can be used to further characterize miRNA-mRNA interactions in myogenesis and understand phenotype variance of skeletal muscle in pigs.

Many studies have suggested that skeletal muscle development is regulated by miRNAs21,24,28,29,39,69,70. However, to date, only a few miRNAs involved in myogenesis have been identified. A previous study suggested that miR-1, miR-133b and miR-206 are associated with skeletal muscle development; we also found that these miRNAs were differentially expressed and critical to prenatal skeletal muscle development. It is currently estimated that miRNAs account for ~1% of predicted genes in eukaryotic genomes71, whereas more than 60% of human genes might be subject to regulation by miRNAs65. Most genes appear to be regulated by more than one miRNA. However, many miRNAs involved in muscle development remain unknown. Even in mammals, little is known about miRNA expression levels or patterns in myogenesis and many miRNAs have yet to be discovered. We identified 75 differentially expressed miRNAs during prenatal skeletal muscle development in pigs. Of these miRNAs, nine (miR-133b, miR-206, miR-202, miR-302b, miR-320, miR-500, miR-625, miR-665 and miR-705) were differentially expressed in all three breeds. With the exception of miR-133b and miR-206, there have been no reports on the functions of these miRNAs in myogenesis. The present study discovered additional miRNAs involved in mammalian myogenesis.

Different breeds of pigs have significant postnatal phenotype differences in birth weight, growth rate and muscle mass and these differences are programmed during prenatal muscle development. A previous study reported that approximately 35, 60 and 90 dpc were key time points in pig myogenesis72. To explore the contribution of miRNAs to muscle development and postnatal phenotype variance, we carried out paired miRNA and mRNA expression profiling of skeletal muscle at 33, 65 and 90 dpc in Landrace (lean-type), Tongcheng (obese-type) and Wuzhishan (mini-type) pigs. Our analysis suggests the existence of significant differences in the expression of miRNAs and mRNAs between breeds. There were differences in category of genes differentially expressed during myogenesis. Only nine miRNAs were expressed in all three breeds during myogenesis. Most miRNAs exhibited temporal and spatial specificity. In selected developmental muscle, while miR-1 and miR-765 were differentially expressed in Tongcheng pigs and 32 miRNAs were differently expressed uniquely in Wuzhishan pigs, only miR-619 was differentially expressed exclusively in Landrace pigs. Thus, these breed-specific miRNAs likely significantly contribute to the skeletal muscle development of each breed. Additionally, Tongcheng pigs are more similar to Landrace pigs than to Wuzhishan pigs in mRNA expression, especially with respect to skeletal muscle development at 33 and 65 dpc. Previous studies revealed that more miRNAs play regulatory roles in the embryonic mouse compare to postnatal animal. In this study, we also found that more miRNAs were differentially expressed at earlier stages (24 miRNAs at 33 dpc) than at later stages (12 miRNAs for 65 dpc and 12 for 90 dpc) between Landrace and Tongcheng pigs. Between Landrace and Wuzhishan pigs, more miRNAs were differently expressed at 33 dpc (54) and 65 dpc (51) than at 90 dpc (16). This trend held true for Tongcheng and Wuzhishan pigs (54, 47 and 18 miRNAs differentially expressed at 33, 65 and 90 dpc, respectively). These facts suggest that miRNAs play more important roles at earlier stages of myogenesis than at later stages of myogenesis.

For miRNA, it is critical to identify target gene for understanding its biological function and molecular mechanism. In this study, we identified 91 potential target mRNAs for 15 miRNAs in Tongcheng pigs, 290 potential target mRNAs for 28 miRNAs in Landrace pigs and 502 potential target mRNAs for 58 miRNAs in Wuzhishan pigs during myogenesis. Unfortunately, we did not get mRNA target for some miRNAs, such as miR-106b and miRNA-125b in Landrace. The reasons maybe is that the prediction target genes were not differentially expressed at mRNA level in the dataset. For the nine miRNAs that were expressed in all three breeds, most target genes were unique to each breed, suggesting that most miRNAs regulate gene expression by targeting different mRNAs in the given tissues. GO enrichment analysis also suggested that different biological processes are potentially regulated by these miRNAs in the different types of pigs. In Tongcheng pigs (obese-type), the top ten biological processes mediated by these miRNAs were the sterol biosynthetic process, nervous system development, negative regulation of translational initiation, regulation of embryonic development, regulation of translation, protein amino acid phosphorylation, the response to hypoxia, somitogenesis, muscle development and regulation of cell adhesion. In Landrace pigs (lean-type), the top ten biological processes were negative regulation of cell proliferation, the sterol biosynthetic process, protein amino acid phosphorylation, RNA splicing, muscle contraction, positive regulation of positive chemotaxis, the isoprenoid biosynthetic process, DNA repair, cell-cell signaling and cell motion. In Wuzhishan pigs (mini-type), the top ten biological processes were the cell cycle, RNA splicing, mRNA processing, regulation of the cell cycle, cell division, cell transport, small GTPase-mediated signal transduction, cell adhesion, phosphate transport and anti-apoptosis. These findings that indicated these breed pigs have significant difference in developmental trajectories and molecular changes. These difference maybe contribute to the phenotype variance of postnatal skeletal muscle between different breed pigs.

Conclusion

In conclusion, this work is the first study to identify the involvement of miRNAs in the regulation of prenatal skeletal muscle development in different pig breeds. Differentially expressed mRNAs and miRNAs were identified and their co-expression and interaction prediction were analyzed. The miRNAs and targets identified in this study are resources that can be used to understand the miRNA regulation of mammalian muscle development and phenotype variance between breeds. Our results are the first findings to indicate that miRNAs play an important role in prenatal skeletal muscle development and phenotypic differences in postnatal muscle between distinct types of pigs. The challenge for future studies will be to identify the relevant targets of miRNAs and to determine how miRNAs contribute to the regulation of skeletal muscle growth and phenotype variance.

Materials and Methods

Ethics statement

All animal procedures were performed according to protocols approved by The Hubei Province, P. R. China for Biological Studies Animal Care and Use Committee.

Animal and RNA preparation

Landrace, Tongcheng and Wuzhishan gilts (at least nine sows for each breed) were mated with the boar of each corresponding breed. The sows were then sacrificed at a commercial slaughterhouse at 33, 65 and 90 dpc (three sows for each stage of each breed). All embryos were collected from sows at first parity. The longissimus muscle samples were immediately collected from fetuses. All samples were snap-frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at –80°C until further analysis. Total RNA was isolated from frozen tissue samples using TRIzol (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, USA) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Total RNA was treated with RNase-free DNase I to remove genomic DNA contamination. The RNA quality was evaluated by spectrophotometry and agarose gel electrophoresis. The same samples were used in all experiments.

miRNA and mRNA oligonucleic array hybrid

The miRCURYTM LNA miR Array (Exiqon, Vedbaek, Denmark) was used to carry out miRNA expression profiling. The experiment was performed using individual RNA samples (n = 3) isolated from different prenatal skeletal muscle specimens. Labeled targets obtained from 5 μg of total RNA were used for hybridization on each microarray. Purified RNA was labeled with a miRCURYTM LNA miR Array Labeling kit (Exiqon, Vedbak, Denmark). The Hy3TM-labeled samples and Hy5TM-labeled reference pool RNA samples were then mixed pair-wise and hybridized to the miRCURY LNA array 10.0 (Exiqon, Vedbak, Denmark). All samples and replicates were analyzed on separate miRNA microarrays. The hybridization was performed according to the miRCURY LNA array manual. Following hybridization, the slides were washed using a wash buffer kit (Exiqon, Vedbak, Denmark), dried and scanned on a GenePix 4000B array scanner (Molecular Devices Co., Sunnyvake, CA, USA). GenePix pro V6.0 software was used to read the raw intensity of the image.

To analyze mRNAs expression, genome-wide mRNA expression profiles were obtained by pig oligoarray analysis ( http://www.pigoligoarray.org/) on the same samples used for miRNA profiling. The process was carried out according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Briefly, double-stranded complementary DNA (cDNA) was synthesized from total RNA. The hybridized probe array was subsequently stained and scanned by a Genechip Scanner 3000. We used the robust multi-array analysis expression measure that represents the log transform of (background corrected and normalized) intensities of GeneChips73. The median pixel intensities were background subtracted. Hybridization signals that failed to exceed the average background value by more than two standard deviations (Signal > Mean + 2 SD) were excluded from analysis. In the three duplicate slides, probe signal > Mean + 2 SD was classified as detected. Expression values were normalized using the Robust Multichip Average methodology74. To acquire the expression value, data were normalized between chips using the quantile normalization method. Statistical analysis was conducted using ANOVA for multiple comparisons. A P-value < 0.05 and a fold change of >1.5 were used as thresholds of significance for differential expression.

qPCR experiments

Three differentially expressed miRNAs (miR-133b, miR-206 and miR-302b) were selected for data verification of the miRNA array. Expression of these mature miRNAs was assayed using stem-loop reverse transcription (RT) followed by qPCR analysis as previously described75. Gene-specific PCR forward primers and a universal PCR reverse primer were designed according to the miRNA sequences. The expression of the U6 small nuclear RNA gene was used as an internal control76. All primers used for stem-loop RT-PCR are shown in Table 5.

Table 5 Primer sequences of miRNAs and genes selected for validation by qPCR.

Twelve differentially expressed mRNAs (IGF2, TPM3, COL15A1, CSRP3, LAMA2, LAMA3, LAMB2, UCHL1, FNDC1, FEZ2, FGL2 and IGFBP7) were used for validation of expression profiling. RT reactions were performed with total RNA (2 μg) using the ReverTra Ace kit (Toyobo, Osaka, Japan). The product was amplified in a reaction volume of 25 μl including 2 μl RT products, 1× reaction buffer, 1U ExTaq DNA polymerase (TakaRa, Japan) and 20 pmol of each primer. PCR reactions were performed for 20 cycles at 94°C for 45 s, 59°C for 30 s and 72°C for 30 s. The primer sequences are listed in Table 5. qPCR experiments were performed in triplicate for each sample as described above. The relative amounts of miRNA and mRNA were normalized against U6 snRNA and GAPDH and the fold change for each miRNA and mRNA was calculated using the 2–ΔΔCt method77. The data are presented as fold changes in gene expression normalized against the internal control and relative to the L33 sample.

Bioinformatic analysis

The Short Time-series Expression Miner (STEM) software78 was used to analyze the expression patterns of differentially expressed genes during skeletal muscle development. We determined the enrichment of clusters by comparing the distribution of observed groups with those expected in a random permutation. Gene co-expression analysis was performed with k-core algorithm79 to determine which genes may play pivotal roles during prenatal skeletal muscle development in pigs. The genes from the most significant up-regulated and down-regulated clusters were selected to construct the co-expression network in each pig breed.

To identify the potential target mRNAs of the miRNAs, we used a combined computational prediction and experimental method based on paired miRNA and mRNA profiling. Potential targets for differentially expressed miRNAs were predicted within the untranslated region (UTR) sequences of inversely correlated target transcripts using the PicTar, TargetScan and miRanda algorithms, which are associated with the Sanger miRbase80. Subsequently, a classical Pearson’s correlation test was performed to identify the negatively correlated pairs between a particular miRNA and potential target mRNA expression15. The significance of each correlation was assessed by assuming that the correlation under the null hypothesis of no correlation follows a distribution with n-1 degrees of freedom, where n is the number of measurements in the expression profile15,81.

To organize genes into hierarchical categories and identify the miR-gene potential regulatory network, GO enrichment analysis was performed to identify biological processes82. The significance of enrichment of a list of target genes with genes belonging to a GO group was scored using a weighting algorithm. A two-sided Fisher’s exact test and a chi-square x2 test were used to classify the GO category and the FDR was calculated to correct the P-value. We chose only GOs that had a p-value of <0.001 and a FDR of <0.05. For each category, enrichment was scored using the weighting algorithm with a list of target genes belonging to a certain category. Then, the miRNA-mRNA interactions analysis during prenatal skeletal muscle development, depicting the critical miRNAs and their targets, was established for each breed based on STRING v9.1 ( http://string-db.org/)83. Potential interaction of miRNA-mRNA was visualized using Cytoscape V2.7 ( http://cytoscape.org/)84.

Plasmid construction

The human mRNA sequences of CNN3 (NM_001839.3), RAP2C (NM_021183.3) and MAP1A (NM_002373.5), retrieved from the GenBank database ( http://blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Blast/), were selected as entries to search for homologous sequences in the pig expression sequence tags (ESTs) database. The porcine ESTs sharing more than 85% sequence identity with human mRNA were selected and assembled using the Seqman program (DNAStar, Inc., Madison, WI, USA). The sequences of SFRS3 (XM_003128366.3) and SMARCD (NM_001244613.1) were selected for primers (Table 6).

Table 6 Information on primers corresponding to target genes and miRNA mimics.

For the wild-type construct, the 3′ UTR sequences of target genes were amplified from pig genomic DNA and cloned downstream of the Renilla Luciferase ORF in the psiCHECK-2 vector (Promega, USA) using the NotI and XhoI restriction sites. For the mutated-type construct, the mutant 3′UTR sequences of target genes, which sharing a 7-bp deletion in the conserved binding site, were synthesized and inserted into the psiCHECK-2 vector. Porcine miR-206 and miR-133b sequences were synthesized by GenePharma Company in Shanghai.

Cell culture

PIEC (Institute of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, P. R. China) were cultured in Dulbecco’s modified Eagle medium (DMEM) with high glucose (Gibco) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Gibco, USA), 1% glutamine (Gibco, USA) and 1% penicillin/streptomycin (Gibco, USA) at 37 °C in an incubator supplemented with 5% CO2.

Luciferase reporter assays

To detect the interactions between target genes and miRNAs, a dual luciferase reporter assay was performed. PIEC were seeded at 8 × 104 cells per well in 24-well plates and 24 hours after plating, the cells were transfected using Lipofectamine™ 2000 (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. In each well, 100 ng of wild-type or mutant 3′UTR plasmid RNA vector and 20 pmol of miRNA mimics or negative control were co-transfected. After 36 h, the cells were harvested by adding 100 μL passive lysis buffer and Renilla and firefly luciferase activities in cell lysate were measured with the dual luciferase assay system (Promega) in a TD-20/20 luminometer (Turner Biosystems, Sunnyvale, CA). The Renilla luciferase signal was normalized to the firefly luciferase signal. This process was performed in triplicate for each target vector.

Western blotting analysis

To validate the target CNN3 of miRNA miR-206, western blotting was used to analyze interaction of miRNA-mRNA at the protein level. PIEC were seeded in 6-well plates and 48 h after transfection, the cells were harvested for protein extraction. The protein concentration was measured with a BCA protein assay (Pierce Chemical, Rockford, USA) according to the manufacturer’s protocol and 20 μg of each sample was subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) on an SDS-acrylamide gel. Separated proteins were transferred to polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) membranes (Millipore, Billerica, USA) and incubated with primary antibody (Calponin 3 (H-55): sc-28546; 1:1000 dilution; Santa Cruz Biotech., Santa Cruz, CA, USA) followed by incubation with a horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-conjugated secondary antibody (1:10000 dilution; Zymed, San Diego, CA, USA). The membrane was re-probed with a primary antibody against GAPDH (1:3000 dilutions; Santa Cruz Biotech., Santa Cruz, CA, USA) as a control. The assay was repeated to confirm the result.

Additional Information

How to cite this article: Tang, Z. et al. Integrated analysis of miRNA and mRNA paired expression profiling of prenatal skeletal muscle development in three genotype pigs. Sci. Rep. 5, 15544; doi: 10.1038/srep15544 (2015).