News Release

UC Davis leads new effort in functional annotation of animal genomes

Grant and Award Announcement

University of California - Davis

Scientists and breeders working with poultry and livestock species will get a new set of tools from an international project that includes the University of California, Davis.

The UC Davis team is led by functional genomicist Huaijun Zhou, an associate professor and Chancellor's Fellow in the Department of Animal Science. The researchers will focus on the genomes of the chicken, cow and pig, which make up the largest meat-producing industries in the United States.

The UC Davis project is part of a comprehensive international effort, known as the Functional Annotation of Animal Genomes (FAANG) Initiative. The international initiative includes research scientists in France, the Netherlands, Australia, Canada and China. It mirrors earlier efforts, called ENCODE (Encyclopedia of DNA Elements), which assembled the functional elements in the human, mouse and model-organism genomes

"Initial sequences of the chicken, bovine and swine genomes were published during the last decade, identifying the genes that actually translate genetic material into proteins," Zhou said.

"Those sequences represent the beginning of an exciting path to understanding the underlying digital code for the biology of these important agricultural species," he said. "But it has become increasingly apparent that we also need to determine the function of surrounding regions of the genes in the genome, sometimes referred to as 'functional elements.' "

These functional elements - once thought to be "junk DNA" because they don't encode proteins - are now known to play a critical role in regulating how genes are expressed and how the genetic material is manifested in an animal's traits.

"The functional elements and the molecular processes they influence, are key to controlling development and complex traits such as production, immune response, reproduction and behavior," Zhou said.

Information gleaned by the new effort will aid breeders in developing healthier and more productive and sustainable farm animals.

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Data produced by the UC Davis team and their collaborators on the FAANG Initiative will be freely distributed through the UCSC Genome Browser, a biological database hosted by UC Santa Cruz, and through Ensembl, a genome browser of the European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI).

Collaborators at UC Davis include Pablo J. Ross, an animal scientist; Ian Korf, a molecular biologist in the Genome Center; Mary Delany, an avian geneticist; Juan Medrano, an animal geneticist; and Alison Van Eenennaam, a Cooperative Extension animal genomics and biotechnology specialist.

Other collaborators are Hans Cheng, a research geneticist at the USDA-ARS Avian Disease and Oncology Laboratory at Michigan State University; Chris Tuggle, an animal scientist at Iowa State University; Cathy Ernst, an animal scientist at Michigan State University; Vicki Leesburg an agricultural statistician with the USDA-ARS; Bing Ren, a molecular geneticist at the Institute of Genomics Institute, UC San Diego; Jim Kent, a bioinformatist at the UCSC Genome Browser; and Paul Flicek, a research scientist at EMBL-EBI.

The UC Davis project is provided by a $500,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture - National Institute of Food and Agriculture, and is also supported by the U.S. Poultry, Cattle, and Swine Genomes Coordination Funds; the National Pork Board; and Aviagen LTD.

Media Contacts

Huaijun Zhou
Animal Science
(530) 752-1034
hzhou@ucdavis.edu

Pat Bailey
UC Davis News Service
(530) 752-9843
pjbailey@ucdavis.edu


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