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Small non-coding RNA transcriptome of four high-altitude vertebrates and their low-altitude relatives.


ABSTRACT: Animals that lived at high altitudes have evolved distinctive physiological traits that allow them to tolerate extreme high-altitude environment, including higher hemoglobin concentration, increased oxygen saturation of blood and a high energy metabolism. Although previous investigations performed plenty of comparison between high- and low-altitude mammals at the level of morphology, physiology and genomics, mechanism underlying high-altitude adaptation remains largely unknown. Few studies provided comparative analyses in high-altitude adaptation, such as parallel analysis in multiple species. In this study, we generated high-quality small RNA sequencing data for six tissues (heart, liver, spleen, lung, kidney and muscle) from low- and high-altitude populations of four typical livestock animals, and identified comparable numbers of miRNAs in each species. This dataset will provide valuable information for understanding the molecular mechanism of high-altitude adaptation in vertebrates.

SUBMITTER: Long K 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6778140 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Small non-coding RNA transcriptome of four high-altitude vertebrates and their low-altitude relatives.

Long Keren K   Feng Siyuan S   Ma Jideng J   Zhang Jinwei J   Jin Long L   Tang Qianzi Q   Wang Xun X   Mai Miaomiao M   Xiao Weihang W   Liu Lingyan L   Li Xuewei X   Li Mingzhou M  

Scientific data 20191004 1


Animals that lived at high altitudes have evolved distinctive physiological traits that allow them to tolerate extreme high-altitude environment, including higher hemoglobin concentration, increased oxygen saturation of blood and a high energy metabolism. Although previous investigations performed plenty of comparison between high- and low-altitude mammals at the level of morphology, physiology and genomics, mechanism underlying high-altitude adaptation remains largely unknown. Few studies provi  ...[more]

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