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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.
71

Determining molecular mechanisms of DNA Non-Homologous End Joining proteins

Pawelczak, Katherine S. 16 March 2011 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / DNA double strand breaks (DSB), particularly those induced by ionizing radiation (IR) are complex lesions and if not repaired, these breaks can lead to genomic instability, chromosomal abnormalities and cell death. IR-induced DSB often have DNA termini modifications including thymine glycols, ring fragmentation, 3' phosphoglycolates, 5' hydroxyl groups and abasic sites. Non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) is a major pathway responsible for the repair of these complex breaks. Proteins involved in NHEJ include the Ku 70/80 heterodimer, DNA-PKcs, processing proteins including Artemis and DNA polymerases µ and λ, XRCC4, DNA ligase IV and XLF. The precise molecular mechanism of DNA-PK activation and Artemis processing at the site of a DNA DSB has yet to be elucidated. We have investigated the effect of DNA sequence and structure on DNA-PK activation and results suggest a model where the 3' strand of a DNA terminus is responsible for annealing and the 5' strand is involved in activation of DNA-PK. These results demonstrate the influence of DNA structure and orientation on DNA-PK activation and provide a molecular mechanism of activation resulting from compatible termini, an essential step in microhomology-mediated NHEJ. Artemis, a nuclease implicated in processing of DNA termini at a DSB during NHEJ, has been demonstrated to have both DNA-PK independent 5'-3' exonuclease activities and DNA-PK dependent endonuclease activity. Evidence suggests that either the enzyme contains two different active sites for each of these distinct processing activities, or the exonuclease activity is not intrinsic to the Artemis polypeptide. To distinguish between these possibilities, we sought to determine if it was possible to biochemically separate Artemis endonuclease activity from exonuclease activity. An exonuclease-free fraction of Artemis was obtained that retained DNA-PK dependent endonuclease activity, was phosphorylated by DNA-PK and reacted with an Artemis specific antibody. These data demonstrate that the exonuclease activity thought to be intrinsic to Artemis can be biochemically separated from the Artemis endonuclease. These results reveal novel mechanisms of two critical NHEJ proteins, and further enhance our understanding of DNA-PK and Artemis activity and their role in NHEJ.
72

Characterization, DNA Binding and Cleavage Activities of New Prodigiosin and Tambjamine Analogues and Their Cu²⁺ and Zn²⁺ Complexes

Chichetu, Karen 24 July 2015 (has links)
Prodigiosins and tambjamines are natural compounds from bacterial and marine sources belonging to a family containing a common 4-methoxy-2,2'-bipyrrole core. These compounds have received a lot of interest due to their promising biological activities. Studies have suggested DNA as a potential therapeutic target for the natural prodigiosin and tambjamine due to their ability to facilitate oxidative DNA cleavage in the presence of Cu2+. Based on this we sought to study the metal binding activity of new prodigiosin and tambjamine analogues. A new prodigiosin analogue was synthesized and complexed with Cu2+. This revealed 1:1 complex formation between the tripyrrole and Cu2+ that was confirmed by mass spectra and NMR spectra analysis. In addition in situ studies also revealed that our new analogues of prodigiosin cannot bind Zn2+ when the methoxy group on ring B is replaced by an alkyl group or when one of the ring nitrogens is methylated. Our UV-Vis experiments with calf thymus DNA showed that prodigiosins and tambjamines bind DNA mainly through an external mode, suggesting that hydrogen bonding between the pyrrole ring nitrogens and the bases of DNA takes precedence over stacking interactions. For the new Cu2+ complex synthesized however, we observed spectral changes that suggest intercalation into DNA. DNA cleavage experiments revealed that the prodigiosin-Cu complex is able to convert supercoiled DNA into its linear form. The data from the gel shift assays fit well to a first-order consecutive reaction model. In addition to preformed metal complexes, we showed DNA cleavage by in situ complexation of the ligands in the presence of Cu2+. However, although we showed Zn2+ complex formation with prodigiosin analogues, in situ studies did not show induction of DNA cleavage by Zn2+ complexes under our experimental conditions.
73

Promoter G-quadruplexes and their Interactions with Ligands and Proteins

Onel, Buket, Onel, Buket January 2016 (has links)
G-quadruplex secondary structures are four-stranded globular nucleic acid structures that form in specific DNA and RNA G-rich sequences with biological significance, such as those found in human telomeres, oncogene promoter regions, replication initiation sites, and 5’- and 3’-untranslated (UTR) regions, which have been identified as novel drug targets. The non-canonical G-quadruplex secondary structures readily form under physiologically relevant ionic conditions, and exhibit great diversity in their topologies and loop conformations depending on the DNA or RNA sequences at hand. The structural diversity of these unique secondary structures is essential to their specific recognition by different regulatory proteins or small molecule compounds. A significant amount of research has been done in this field that provides compelling evidence for the existence, biological significance, and potential druggability of G-quadruplexes. In this dissertation, I explore G-quadruplex formation in the promoters of BCL2, PDGFR-β and c-Myc oncogenes and their interactions with small molecule compounds or proteins. Firstly, I investigated a newly-identified G-quadruplex (P1G4) forming immediately upstream of the human BCL2 gene, which has been found to be overexpressed in several human tumors. In this research, I have found that P1G4 acts as a transcription repressor, and that its inhibitory effect can be enriched by the G-quadruplex-interactive compound, TMPyP4. Both P1G4 and the previously reported Pu39 G-quadruplexes form independently in adjacent regions within the BCL2 P1 promoter, but P1G4 appears to play a more dominant role in repressing transcriptional activity. NMR and CD studies have shown that the P1G4 G-quadruplex appears to comprise a novel dynamic equilibrium of two parallel structures, one regular, with two 1-nt loops and a 12-nt middle loop, and another broken-stranded, with three 1-nt loops and an 11-nt middle loop; both structures adopt a novel hairpin (stem-loop duplex) conformation in the long central loop. This dynamic equilibrium of two closely-related G-quadruplex structures with a unique hairpin loop conformation may provide a specific target for small molecules to modulate BCL2 gene transcription. I also explored the 3’ end G-quadruplex that forms within the core promoter of PDGFR-β, which has also been observed to be present at abnormal levels in a variety of clinical pathologies, including malignancies. The 3′-end G-quadruplex formed in the PDGFR-β promoter NHE appears to be selectively stabilized by an ellipticine analog, GSA1129, which can shift the dynamic equilibrium in the full-length sequence to favor the 3′-end G-quadruplex, and can repress PDGFR-β activity in cancer cell lines. NMR studies in combination with biophysical experiments have shown that in the wild-type extended 3ʼ-end NHE sequences, two novel intramolecular G-quadruplexes can be formed in a potassium solution, one with a 3’-flanking distant guanine inserted into the 3’-external tetrad (3’-insertion G-quadruplex), and another with a 5’-flanking distant guanine inserted into the 5’-external tetrad (5’-insertion G-quadruplex). Further investigation of the elongated PDGFR-β 3′-end sequence containing both the 5’- and 3’- flanking guanine sequences showed the formation of a combination of the two G-quadruplexes existing in equilibrium. Importantly, it was observed that GSA1129 can bind to and increase the stability of each of the end-insertion G-quadruplexes, raising their Tₘ by 25 degrees. This study highlights the dynamic nature of the 3′-end NHE sequence and the importance of identifying the proper sequence for the formation of biologically relevant G-quadruplex structures. Significantly, the dynamic nature of the 3′-end G-quadruplex suggests that it may be an attractive target for drug regulation. I then analyzed two proteins, Nucleolin and NM23-H2, which interact with the c-Myc G-quadruplex structure that forms in the proximal promoter region of the c-Myc gene; this is one of the most commonly deregulated genes in the human neoplasm. Nucleolin is known to be a transcriptional repressor for c-Myc, binding to and stabilizing the c-Myc G-quadruplex, whereas NM23-H2 is known to be a transcriptional activator that unwinds and destabilizes the c-Myc G-quadruplex. An investigation of the molecular mechanisms of the interaction between the c-Myc G-quadruplex and nucleolin showed that the minimal binding domains required for a tight binding of the protein to the c-Myc G-quadruplex are the four RNA binding domains (RBDs) of nucleolin, referred to as Nuc1234, and that the RGG domain is unnecessary for c-Myc G-quadruplex binding. The stable G-quadruplex formed within Pu27 using G-tract runs I, II, IV and V was determined to be the best substrate (Myc1245T) for nucleolin binding, showing the highest affinity. 3D NMR experiments performed on the free protein Nuc1234 and its complex with the Myc1245T G-quadruplex have shown that upon complex formation, only the disordered linker regions of the protein display significant chemical shift changes, whereas most other residues show chemical shift values similar to those of the free protein. The c-Myc G-quadruplex has three loops that flip outward in a solvent containing K⁺, according to its structure. The hypothesis for this association is that nucleolin wraps around the G-quadruplex and interacts specifically with the flipped-outward loop regions of the c-Myc G-quadruplex via its own inter-RBD linker regions, with little structural change in the RBDs themselves. A definitive determination of the 3D molecular structure of nucleolin and its complex with Myc1245T is currently in development. Biophysical and structural studies were then conducted to investigate the interactions of the protein NM23-H2/NDP kinase B with the c-Myc G-quadruplex. NM23-H2 binds to single-stranded guanine- and cytosine-rich sequences, but not to double-stranded DNA in the NHE III₁ region; the binding therefore appears structure-specific, rather than sequence-specific. Moreover, increasing concentrations of the strong G-quadruplex-interactive compound TMPyP4, a porphyrin-based drug, inhibits the binding of NM23-H2 to the NHE III₁ region; this suggests that the stabilization of the G-quadruplex hinders the recognition and remodeling function of the NM23-H2. By conducting Forster Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) assays in combination with Circular Dichroism (CD) studies, I demonstrated that NM23-H2 can actively resolve the c-Myc G-quadruplex. Taken together, these results show that the use of small molecules to prevent NM23-H2 from binding to and resolving the NHE III₁ region G-quadruplex may have the potential to inhibit c-Myc transcription for cancer therapeutic purposes. This underlines the importance of understanding the mechanism of function operating between NM23-H2 and the c-Myc G-quadruplex. Understanding molecular mechanism between NM23-H2 and c-Myc is under investigation.
74

Two Wavelength High Intensity Irradiation for Effective Crosslinking of DNA to Protein

Guler, Emine 09 April 2004 (has links)
Protein-DNA crosslinking is an important method to study protein-DNA interactions. Crosslinking by short pulsed UV lasers is a potentially powerful tool that results in efficient crosslinking, apparently by a two photon process. However, the major problem in using UV laser crosslinking is that the conditions which lead to high crosslinking efficiency also result in high DNA damage. Previously, it has been shown that a combination of femtosecond laser pulses at two different wavelengths, in the UV (266 nm) and the visible range (400 nm), increases the effective crosslinking yield (i.e. higher crosslinking yields with reduced DNA damage). This new strategy has the advantage that the intensity of the UV pulse for the first excitation step can be kept low, leading to lower UV-induced DNA damage and the second pulse at a visible wavelength can provide enough energy for the UV excited bases to cross their ionization threshold without damaging the DNA. The objective of this thesis project was to develop a novel UV laser cross-linking technique that would permit higher effective crosslinking yields with the commonly used pulses in the nanosecond (ns) range. To serve this purpose we tried to extend the two-wavelength femto second laser irradiation approach to longer duration pulses. We chose MBP-PIF3 protein and its target G-box DNA motif as a model system. Before ultraviolet irradiation of the protein-DNA complexes in vitro, the specific binding interaction of purified MBP-PIF3 protein with the G-box DNA motif was studied by Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay (EMSA). We irradiated the PIF3/DNA complexes with different laser systems (i.e. Nd:YAG and Dye lasers) and their combinations. We were expecting to see that the combination of UV laser pulses (260nm) with longer wavelength dye laser pulses (480nm) will produce higher effective crosslink yields relative to the yield from the UV pulses alone.
75

Winning the cellular lottery: how proteins reach and recognize targets in DNA

Redding, Sy Eugene January 2015 (has links)
Many aspects of biology depend on the ability of DNA-binding proteins to locate specific binding sites within the genome. This search process is required at the beginning of all site-specific protein-DNA interactions, and has the potential to act as the first stage of biological regulation. Given the difficulty of pinpointing a small region of DNA, within even simple genomes, it is expected that proteins are adapted to use specialized mechanisms, collectively referred to as facilitated diffusion [Berg et al., 1981], to effectively reduce the dimensionality of their searches, and rapidly find their targets. Here, we use a combination of nanofabricated microfluidic devices and single-molecule microscopy to determine whether facilitated diffusion contributes to all DNA target searches. We investigate promoter binding by E. coli RNA polymerase, foreign DNA recognition by CRISPR-Cas complexes, and Rad51’s homology search during recombination. In each example, we observe that the target searches proceed without extensive use of facilitated diffusion; rather, consideration of these non-facilitated target searches reveals an alternative search strategy. We show that instead of reducing the dimensionality of their searches, these proteins, reduce search complexity by minimizing unproductive interactions with DNA, thereby increase the probability of locating a specific DNA target.
76

Genome-wide survey of YY1 binding reveals Its interplay with non-coding RNAs in skeletal myogenesis.

January 2012 (has links)
骨骼肌分化是由一个包括转录因子、表观遗传调控子和非编码RNA在内的复杂网络共同调控的。YY1能够通过募集PRC2抑制一系列肌肉结构基因的表达,进而抑制肌肉分化。miRNA是一组转录后调控基因表达的小片段非编码RNA,miRNA与转录因子的相互作用已经被广泛证实。在本次研究中,我们证实了一个YY1和肌肉特异性miRNA(miR-1,miR-133和miR-206)的调控回路。实验证实,YY1通过肌肉特异性miRNA增强子区域的YY1结合位点募集PRC2来抑制肌肉特异性miRNA的表达。YY1调控miR-1在体外和体内肌肉分化均被证实有重要意义。另外,我们还证实miR-1能够负反馈作用于YY1,抑制YY1的表达。 / 为了阐述YY1在基因组转录中的作用,我们做了肌肉中YY1的ChIP-seq。测序结果表明在C2C12肌肉母细胞中有1820个YY1结合位点,其中很大部分位于基因间的区域。进一步研究发现,基因间YY1的结合可能调控一些lincRNA,而这些lincRNA在肌肉发育的作用目前尚不清楚。进一步研究这些可能受YY1调节的lincRNA,我们证实了YY1能够正调控两个新的lincRNA,YAM-1和YAM-2。YAM-1在肌肉分化过程中逐渐下调,并且通过正调控他的临近基因miR-715,抑制肌肉分化,而YAM-2能够促进早期的肌肉分化。 / 总之,我们第一次在肌肉细胞中进行了YY1的ChIP-seq,并且证实在肌肉分化过程中转录因子和非编码RNA相互作用的重要性和普遍性。 / Skeletal muscle cell differentiation is a process orchestrated by a complex network of transcription factors, epigenetic regulators and non-coding RNAs. As a repressor of myogenesis, Yin Yang 1 (YY1) silences a number of muscle structural genes through recruiting Polycomb repressive complex2 (PRC2) in proliferating myoblasts. microRNAs (miRNAs) are small non-coding RNAs that regulate gene expression post-transcriptionally, and mounting evidences support the prevalence and functional significance of their interplay with transcription factors (TFs). Here we describe the identification of a regulatory circuit between muscle miRNAs (miR-1, miR-133 and miR-206) and Yin Yang 1 (YY1). The subsequent experimental results demonstrate that YY1 indeed represses muscle miRs expression in myoblasts and the repression is mediated through multiple enhancers and recruitment of Polycomb complex to several YY1 binding sites. YY1 regulating miR-1 is functionally important for both in vitro and in vivo myogenesis. Furthermore, we demonstrate that miR-1 in turn targets YY1, thus forming a negative feedback loop. / To elucidate its role on genome-wide regulation of transcription, here in the second part of this study we performed ChIP-Seq for YY1 in muscle cells. Our results revealed 1820 YY1 binding peaks genome-wide in myoblasts, with a large portion residing in the intergenic region. A close analysis of the intergenic region bound by YY1 uncovered that YY1 may regulate a large number of lincRNAs (Long Intergenic non-coding RNAs), whose roles in skeletal myogenesis have not been explored yet. As further elucidation of the functional roles of YY1-lincRNA regulation, we identified two novel lincRNAs, YAM-1 and YAM-2 as positively regulated by YY1. YAM-1 was found to be down-regulated upon myogenic differentiation and acts as an inhibitor of myoblast differentiation. We further demonstrated that YAM-1 functions by its in cis regulation on a downstream gene, miR-715 which promotes differentiation. YAM-2, on the other hand, appears to promote myogenesis. / Together, our studies not only provide the first genome-wide picture of YY1 association in muscle cells but also uncovered novel regulatory circuits required for skeletal myogenesis and reinforce the idea that regulatory circuitry involving non-coding RNAs and TFs is essential components of myogenic regulatory network. / Detailed summary in vernacular field only. / Detailed summary in vernacular field only. / Detailed summary in vernacular field only. / Lu, Leina. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2012. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 144-167). / Abstract also in Chinese. / Abstract / 摘要 / Acknowledgement / Publications / List of figures / List of tables / Abbreviations / Table of content / Chapter Chapter 1: --- INTRODUCTION / Chapter 1.1 --- Skeletal Myogenesis --- p.1 / Chapter 1.2 --- Transcriptional Regulation of myogenic differentiation --- p.3 / Chapter 1.2.1 --- Transcriptional regulatory network in myogenic differentiation --- p.3 / Chapter 1.2.2 --- YY1 as a transcription factor in myogenic differentiation --- p.5 / Chapter 1.3 --- Epigenetic Regulation during skeletal muscle differentiation --- p.6 / Chapter 1.4 --- microRNA: Post-transcriptional regulation on myogenic differentiation --- p.11 / Chapter 1.4.1 --- Muscle specific miRNAs in skeletal myogenic differentiation --- p.15 / Chapter 1.4.2 --- Non-muscle specific miRNAs in skeletal myogenic differentiation --- p.20 / Chapter 1.4.3 --- miRNAs and skeletal muscle diseases --- p.23 / Chapter 1.5 --- Long Non-coding RNAs --- p.26 / Chapter 1.5.1 --- Long Non-coding RNAs and lincRNAs --- p.26 / Chapter 1.5.2 --- LincRNAs in muscles --- p.30 / Chapter Chapter 2: --- MATERIALS AND METHODS / Chapter 2.1 --- C2C12 cell line --- p.32 / Chapter 2.2 --- Primary Myoblast isolation and in vitro culture --- p.32 / Chapter 2.3 --- Animal studies --- p.33 / Chapter 2.4 --- RNA extraction --- p.34 / Chapter 2.5 --- RT-PCR and Real-Time RT-PCR --- p.35 / Chapter 2.6 --- Transfection and infection --- p.37 / Chapter 2.7 --- Oligonucleotides --- p.38 / Chapter 2.8 --- Dual-luciferase reporter assay --- p.43 / Chapter 2.9 --- Immunofluorencence staining --- p.44 / Chapter 2.10 --- Antibodies --- p.45 / Chapter 2.11 --- Protein extraction and Western blotting --- p.46 / Chapter 2.12 --- DNA constructs --- p.48 / Chapter 2.13 --- Mutagenesis --- p.49 / Chapter 2.14 --- RNA-Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization (RNA-FISH) --- p.51 / Chapter 2.15 --- C2C12 cells with YY1-stably knocked down --- p.52 / Chapter 2.16 --- Rapid Amplification of cDNA Ends (RACE) --- p.53 / Chapter 2.17 --- Chromatin Immunoprecipitation (ChIP) --- p.55 / Chapter 2.18 --- ChIP-PCR --- p.58 / Chapter 2.19 --- ChIP-sequencing --- p.58 / Chapter 2.20 --- Northern blotting --- p.59 / Chapter 2.21 --- Prediction of miRNA targets --- p.60 / Chapter 2.22 --- Statistical analysis --- p.60 / Chapter Chapter 3: --- Results / Chapter 3.1 --- YY1-miR-1/133 regulatory circuitry in skeletal myogenesis --- p.61 / Chapter 3.1.1 --- YY1 decreases miR-1/133 during skeletal muscle differentiation --- p.61 / Chapter 3.1.1.1 --- Negative correlation between YY1 and miR-1/133 during C2C12 differentiation --- p.61 / Chapter 3.1.1.2 --- Negative correlation between YY1 and miR-1/133 in primary cell differentiation --- p.63 / Chapter 3.1.1.3 --- Negative correlation between YY1 and miR-1/133 in postnatal muscle development and mdx mouse model --- p.65 / Chapter 3.1.1.4 --- Deletion of YY1 upregulates miR-1/133 both in C1C12 and primary myoblast --- p.68 / Chapter 3.1.1.5 --- Deletion of YY1 upregulates miR-1/133 at the transcriptional level --- p.70 / Chapter 3.1.2 --- YY1 represses miR-1/133 by binding to 4 enhancers --- p.72 / Chapter 3.1.2.1 --- Four enhancers of miR-1/133 with potential YY1 targeting sites --- p.72 / Chapter 3.1.2.2 --- YY1 represses the four enhancers’ activities --- p.75 / Chapter 3.1.2.3 --- Depletion of YY1 up-regulates the four enhancers’ activities --- p.77 / Chapter 3.1.2.4 --- YY1 directly binds to the putative binding sites and mediates the repression on miR-1/133 --- p.79 / Chapter 3.1.2.5 --- YY1 recruits Ezh2 to the enhancers which subsequently causes histone modification --- p.82 / Chapter 3.1.3 --- YY1 repressing miR-1/133 is functionally significant in myogenesis --- p.84 / Chapter 3.1.3.1 --- Negative correlation between YY1 and miR-1/133 in CTX induced muscle regeneration model --- p.84 / Chapter 3.1.3.2 --- Depletion of YY1 in CTX induced muscle regeneration model promotes miR-1/133 expression --- p.87 / Chapter 3.1.3.3 --- Depletion of YY1 in CTX induced muscle regeneration model promotes muscle differentiation --- p.89 / Chapter 3.1.4 --- miR-1 can target YY1 forming a feedback loop --- p.92 / Chapter 3.1.5 --- miR-1 can repress Pax7 by targeting two binding sites on 3’UTR --- p.95 / Chapter 3.1.5.1 --- miR-1 targets Pax7 by binding to two target sites --- p.95 / Chapter 3.1.5.2 --- miR-1 represses Pax7 forming an YY1-miR-1-Pax7 regulating circuitry in skeletal myogenesis --- p.98 / Chapter 3.1.6 --- Conclusion: YY1-miR-1-Pax7 regulatory circuitry in skeletal myogenesis --- p.100 / Chapter 3.2 --- ChIP-seq reveals YY1-lincRNA regulation in skeletal myogenesis --- p.102 / Chapter 3.2.1 --- ChIP-seq uncovered a large number of genes under YY1 regulation --- p.102 / Chapter 3.2.2 --- ChIP-seq reveals that YY1 associates with lincRNA loci --- p.105 / Chapter 3.2.2.1 --- YY1 associates with lincRNA-YAM loci --- p.105 / Chapter 3.2.2.2 --- YY1 positively regulates YAM-1 and YAM-2 both in vitro and in vivo --- p.107 / Chapter 3.2.3 --- YY1-YAM-1-miR-715 regulatory pathway in muscle differentiation --- p.109 / Chapter 3.2.3.1 --- Genomic organization and cellular localization of YAM-1 --- p.109 / Chapter 3.2.3.2 --- Expression of YAM-1 decreases during myogenic differentiation --- p.112 / Chapter 3.2.3.3 --- YAM-1 represses myogenic differentiation both in vitro and in vivo --- p.115 / Chapter 3.2.3.3.1 --- YAM-1 inhibits C2C12 differentiation --- p.115 / Chapter 3.2.3.3.2 --- YAM-1 inhibits muscle differentiation in vivo --- p.117 / Chapter 3.2.3.4 --- A functional YY1-YAM-1-miR-715 regulatory axis in skeletal myogenic differentiation --- p.119 / Chapter 3.2.3.4.1 --- miR-715 is down-regulated during muscle differentiation --- p.119 / Chapter 3.2.3.4.2 --- miR-715 is under the regulation of YY1-YAM-1 --- p.122 / Chapter 3.2.3.4.3 --- miR-715 represses muscle differentiation forming a YAM-1-miR-715 regulatory axis during muscle differentiation --- p.124 / Chapter 3.2.4 --- YAM-2 promotes early myogenic differentiation --- p.126 / Chapter 3.2.4.1 --- Genomic organization and cellular localization of YAM-2 --- p.126 / Chapter 3.2.4.2 --- YAM-2 is regulated during myogenic differentiation --- p.129 / Chapter 3.2.4.3 --- YAM-2 promotes early myogenic differentiation --- p.131 / Chapter Chapter 4: --- DISCUSSION / Chapter 4.1. --- YY1-miRNA regulatory circuit in skeletal myogenesis --- p.133 / Chapter 4.2 --- YY1 mediates epigenetic modification in skeletal myogenesis --- p.135 / Chapter 4.3 --- miRNAs in skeletal myogenesis --- p.136 / Chapter 4.4 --- YY1 regulates long intergenic non-coding RNAs in skeletal myogenesis --- p.138 / Chapter Chapter --- 5: SUMMARY AND FUTURE WORK --- p.142 / REFERENCE --- p.144
77

Strand replacement of plasmid R1162 and transport of MobA during conjugative transfer

Parker, Christopher Todd, 1972- 28 August 2008 (has links)
R1162 is a broad-host range, mobilizable plasmid conferring resistance to streptomycin and sulfonamides. Efficient conjugative mobilization of R1162 requires three plasmid-encoded proteins: MobA, MobB and MobC. MobA binds plasmid DNA at the origin of transfer (oriT), nicks the subsequently transferred strand and ligates the ends of the strand after transfer into the recipient. The N-terminal region of this protein carries out this DNA processing. The C-terminal half is a primase required to initiate DNA synthesis at two single-stranded priming sites sites, oriL and oriR, during vegetative plasmid replication. The primase region of MobA is not necessary for DNA processing by the N-terminal part of the protein, however its role in strand replacement during conjugation is not clearly defined. This study demonstrates that R1162 can undergo multiple rounds of transfer from a single plasmid molecule. The presence of oriL increases the frequency of second-round transfer, presumably due to initiation of replacement strand synthesis at this site by R1162 primase in the donor. Priming at oriR by the primase region of MobA is required for efficient replacement strand synthesis in the recipient when the plasmid is transferred to Salmonella. When the plasmid is transferred into E. coli, the plasmid-encoded priming system is not required for strand replacement in the recipient, presumably due to a host-encoded mechanism capable of priming the transferred strand. Transport of MobA through the R751 conjugative pore was also investigated. The two domains of MobA can be transported to recipient cells independently of each other. However, MobB is required for the transport of either fragment. Two sites, named the R-site and the P-site, are located in the relaxase and primase domains of MobA, respectively, and make up part of the signals required for MobA transport. Unlike previously described type IV transport signals, domain structure is required for the MobA transport signals to be active. / text
78

Characterisation of nuclear sub-structures

Patel, Shailendra Bhanubhai January 1984 (has links)
When living cells are lysed in non-ionic detergents and 2M NaCl, structures are released that resemble nuclei, termed nucleoids. Nucleoids contain tenaciously attached DNA, RNA and protein. The nature of the interactions of these components is poorly understood. It is known that the DNA is attached to these structures in a looped configuration, and newly synthesised DNA is found closely associated with the attachment sites. Therefore, the speculation that these attachment sites have a functional signification other than for structural purposes has been seriously considered. To investigate these possibilities, the proteins were characterised for DNA binding activity, and the presence of any enzymatic activity. Some of the nucleoid proteins are derived from the cell surface, and specific phosphorylating and methylating activities were also detected. The significance of these findings remains to be determined. The study of the DNA-binding activity is hampered by the fact that these proteins are not readily solubilised away from the nucleic acids. However, DNA-binding proteins are present in nucleoids. No specificity for DNA sequences was demonstrable, using the protein blotting technique. In the course of these studies, a new technique was devised to enable sequence-binding proteins to be identified. Examination of the DNA close to thl attachment sites shows it to be enriched in transcriptionally active genes, and in a given population of cells, some genes are closer to the attachment sites than others. This supports the idea that genes are specifically arranged within the nucleus of any cell, and that this position is of functional significance. Direct examination of the most closely adherent DNA to these structures did not reveal any one DNA sequence that may mediate attachment.
79

X-ray structures of p22 c2 repressor-dna complexes: the mechansism of direct and indirect readout

Watkins, Jason Derrick 26 August 2008 (has links)
The P22 c2 repressor protein (P22R) binds to DNA sequence-specifically and helps direct the temperate lambdoid bacteriophage P22 to the lysogenic developmental pathway. To gain insight into its DNA binding mechanism, we solved the 1.6 Å x-ray structure of the N-terminal domain (NTD) of P22R in a complex with a DNA fragment containing the synthetic operator sequence [d(ATTTAAGATATCTTAAAT)]2 This operator has an A-T at position 9L and T-A at position 9R and is termed DNA9T. Van der Waals interactions between protein and DNA appear to confer sequence-specificity. The structure of the P22R NTD – NA9T complex suggests that sequence-specificity arises substantially from interaction of a valine with a complementary binding cleft on the major groove surface of DNA9T. The cleft is formed by four methyl groups on sequential base pairs of 5' TTAA 3'. The valine cleft is intrinsic to the DNA sequence and does not arise from protein-induced DNA conformational change. Protein-DNA hydrogen bonding plays a secondary role in specificity.
80

Functional characterisation of Polycomblike and a novel, chromosomal protein interactor from Drosophila melanogaster / by Stanley Robert.

Robert, Stanley January 1997 (has links)
Bibliography: p. 96-108. / 108, [31] p., [9] leaves of plates : ill. (chiefly col.) ; 30 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / The major aim of this thesis is the identification and characterisation of Polycomblike (PCL) protein interactors. The study analyses the ability of PCL to bind directly to DNA anchoring the Pc-G complex to the genes which they repress. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Genetics, 1997

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