Multi-tissue single-nucleus RNA-seq reveals cell type-specific regulatory patterns of alternative polyadenylation in pigs
- Qiuhan Wen1,
- Zhen Wang2,
- Qi Bao2,
- Tianli Ding2,
- Haihan Zhang3,
- Jianbo Li4,
- Zhuang Liu5,
- Jieping Huang6 and
- Guoqiang Yi7,8
- 1 Agricultural Genomics Institute at Shenzhen, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Guangxi University;
- 2 Agricultural Genomics Institute at Shenzhen, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences;
- 3 Hunan Agricultural University;
- 4 Guangdong Academy of Agricultural Sciences;
- 5 Karolinska Institute;
- 6 Guangxi University;
- 7 Agricultural Genomics Institute at Shenzhen, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Bama Yao Autonomous County Rural Revitalization Research Institute
Abstract
As an important post-transcriptional modification mechanism, alternative polyadenylation (APA) plays a crucial role in gene regulation and phenotypic diversity. While extensive studies have explored the global APA landscape using bulk RNA-seq data, in-depth analyses of APA events at the single-cell level remain limited - particularly in farm animals. In this study, we constructed a comprehensive APA atlas for 261 cell types across 19 porcine tissues based on single-nucleus RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq) data. This analysis revealed tissue- and cell type-specific patterns of APA. We found that many genes displayed a clear correlation between the average length of 3' untranslated regions (3'UTRs) and expression levels in various cell types, with most showing a negative correlation. Early cell types within the developmental lineage, such as spermatogonia and satellite cells, displayed longer 3'UTRs, especially for spermatogenesis, where 3'UTR lengths showed significant decreasing trends along the differentiation trajectory. Notably, we identified that variable 3'UTR lengths in the CD47 and GPD1 genes might be critical regulators during spermatogenesis and myogenesis, respectively, potentially through modulation of RNA-binding protein and miRNA binding sites. Furthermore, the SNP rs323354626, located in the 3'UTR of the CD47 gene, significantly impacts gene splicing and is strongly associated with reproductive phenotypes. Additionally, we observed that neuronal cells generally possess longer 3'UTRs – a pattern conserved across humans, mice, fruit flies, and pigs. Together, these findings enrich the single-cell atlas of pigs by adding a layer of post-transcriptional regulation to the existing gene expression data, highlighting the significant role of cell type-specific 3'UTR lengths in cell commitment and complex trait regulation.
- Received October 12, 2024.
- Accepted June 6, 2025.
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
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