TypeSINE: Genome-Wide Detection of SINE Retrotransposon Polymorphisms Reveals Functional Variants Linked to Body Size Variation in Pigs
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
The genotyping of Short Interspersed Element (SINE) retrotransposon insertion polymorphisms (RIPs) from large-scale sequencing data remains technically challenging. To overcome this limitation, we developed TypeSINE to genotype SINE-RIPs from short-read sequencing data. Analyzing 362 porcine genomes, we identified 749,835 SINE-RIPs (>85% accuracy), including 65,917 common variants (5-95% frequency). These showed uniform genomic distribution (∼22/Mb), with 40% in introns. Population analyses based on SINE-RIPs revealed independent domestication of Asian and European pigs from local wild populations, followed by introgression. GWAS detected body size-associated regions using SINE-RIPs. We created pigRIPdb (82,227 curated SINE-RIPs) with browsing and visualization tools. The method’s cross-species applicability is supported by conserved SINE evolutionary patterns, enabling polymorphism discovery of SINEs in livestock and humans. TypeSINE represents an efficient, scalable solution for genome-wide SINE-RIP analysis, advancing population genomics research.
Teaser
An integrated SINE-RIP genotyping platform with companion database enables large-scale analysis of SINE evolution and population genetics in swine