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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

In silico identification of genes regulated by abscisic acid in <i>Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh</i>.

Gómez-Porras, Judith Lucia January 2005 (has links)
Abscisic acid (ABA) is a major plant hormone that plays an important role during plant growth and development. During vegetative growth ABA mediates (in part) responses to various environmental stresses such as cold, drought and high salinity. The response triggered by ABA includes changes in the transcript level of genes involved in stress tolerance. The aim of this project was the In silico identification of genes putatively regulated by ABA in A. thaliana. In silico predictions were combined with experimental data in order to evaluate the reliability of computational predictions.<br><br> Taking advantage of the genome sequence of <i>A. thaliana</i> publicly available since 2000, 1 kb upstream sequences were screened for combinations of cis-elements known to be involved in the regulation of ABA-responsive genes. It was found that around 10 to 20 percent of the genes of <i>A. thaliana</i> might be regulated by ABA.<br><br> Further analyses of the predictions revealed that certain combinations of cis-elements that confer ABA-responsiveness were significantly over-represented compared with results in random sequences and with random expectations. In addition, it was observed that other combinations that confer ABA-responsiveness in monocotyledonous species might not be functional in A. thaliana. It is proposed that ABA-responsive genes in <i>A. thaliana</i> show pairs of ABRE (abscisic acid responsive element) with MYB binding sites, DRE (dehydration responsive element) or with itself.<br><br> The analysis of the distances between pairs of cis-elements suggested that pairs of ABREs are bound by homodimers of ABRE binding proteins. In contrast, pairs between MYB binding sites and ABRE, or DRE and ABRE showed a distance between cis-elements that suggested that the binding proteins interact through protein complexes and not directly.<br><br> The comparison of computational predictions with experimental data confirmed that the regulatory mechanisms leading to the induction or repression of genes by ABA is very incompletely understood. It became evident that besides the cis-elements proposed in this study to be present in ABA-responsive genes, other known and unknown cis-elements might play an important role in the transcriptional regulation of ABA-responsive genes. For example, auxin-related cis elements, or the cis-elements recognized by the NAM-family of transcription factors (Non-Apical meristem).<br><br> This work documents the use of computational and experimental approaches to analyse possible interactions between cis-elements involved in the regulation of ABA-responsive genes. The computational predictions allowed the distinction between putatively relevant combinations of cis-elements from irrelevant combinations of cis-elements in ABA-responsive genes. The comparison with experimental data allowed to identify certain cis-elements that have not been previously associated to the ABA-mediated transcriptional regulation, but that might be present in ABA-responsive genes (e.g. auxin responsive elements). Moreover, the efforts to unravel the gene regulatory network associated with the ABA-signalling pathway revealed that NAM-transcription factors and their corresponding binding sequences are important components of this network. / Pflanzen reagieren auf aeußere Stresseinwirkung (z.B. Trockenheit oder Hitze) u.a. mit der Bildung bestimmter Hormone. Diese Hormone wiederum bewirken eine Vielzahl komplexer Reaktionen (z.B. im Stoffwechsel und in der Genexpression), die zum Ziel haben, die Pflanzen widerstandsfaehiger gegen die Stresssituation zu machen. Ein wichtiges Stresshormon ist die Abzisinsaeure (ABA, fuer engl. „abscisic acid“). Experimentell koennen Pflanzen durch die Gabe von ABA zu Reaktionen gezwungen werden, die normalerweise nur unter Stressbedingungen beobachtet werden. Hierzu zaehlen vor allem eine Reduktion der Spaltoeffnungen in den Blaettern, um den Wasserverlust infolge von Transpiration zu minimieren, und eine massive Umprogrammierung der Genexpression.<br><br> In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde der Einfluss von ABA auf die Genexpression in der Modellpflanze <i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i> untersucht. Hierzu wurden bioinformatorische und experimentelle Ansaetze verknuepft. Die bioinformatorischen Ansaetze bedienten sich der bekannten Sequenz des Genoms von <i>A. thaliana</i>. Mit Hilfe verschiedener geeigneter Computerprogramme wurden im Genom Gene identifiziert, deren Expression potentiell durch ABA reguliert wird. Die so erhaltenen Vorhersagen der verschiedenen Programme wurden miteinander und mit eigenen als auch mit publizierten experimentellen Daten verglichen, um die Qualitaet der Vorhersagen zu beurteilen. <br><br> Die wichtigste Schlussfolgerung aus den Ergebnissen dieser Arbeit ist, dass gegenwaertig bioinformatorische Ansaetze allein nicht ausreichen, um biologische Prozesse zufriedenstellend zu analysieren. In der vorliegenden Arbeit ermoeglichte erst eine Kombination aus bioinformatorischen und experimentellen Ansaetzen die Generierung neuer, abgesicherter Hypothesen zur ABA-induzierten Umprogrammierung der Genexpression.

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