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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

RNA BINDING PROPERTIES OF A TRANSLATIONAL ACTIVATOR THAT ALSO FUNCTIONS IN GROUP I INTRON SPLICING

Kaspar, Ben J. 16 July 2008 (has links)
No description available.
2

Functional diversity within a ribosomal-like protein family in Arabidopsis thaliana / Diversité fonctionnelle au sein d'une famille de protéines de type ribosomique chez Arabidopsis thaliana

Wang, ChuanDe 27 November 2018 (has links)
L'expression des ARN mitochondriaux et chloroplastiques des plantes implique un grand nombre de modifications post-transcriptionnelles, parmi lesquelles l'épissage des introns est un processus essentiel. Sur la base de leur structure et des mécanismes d'épissage associés, les introns peuvent être classés en deux familles et ceux présents dans les organites des plantes appartiennent au groupe II. Les introns mitochondriaux et chloroplastiques de groupe II sont fortement dégénérés et ont perdu la capacité de s'auto-épisser in vivo. Leur élimination nécessite l’action de nombreux facteurs protéiques codés dans le noyau et importés dans les organites. Les protéines de liaison à l'ARN jouent un rôle prédominant dans ce processus complexe. Les protéines ribosomales sont des protéines abondantes se liant à l'ARN et peuvent être recrutées pour remplir diverses fonctions annexes. Au cours de ma thèse, j’ai étudié la fonction des protéines de type uL18 chez Arabidopsis, qui comprend 8 membres. Ces protéines partagent un domaine uL18 plutôt dégénéré, mais dont la structure est conservée, et dont la fonction initiale est de permettre l’association avec l’ARNr 5S. Nos résultats ont montré que cinq protéines de type uL18 sont adressées aux mitochondries et trois aux chloroplastes. Deux d’entre elles correspondent à de véritables protéines ribosomales uL18 associées aux ribosomes des organites, tandis que deux autres (uL18-L1 et uL18-L8) se sont transformées en facteurs d'épissage et sont nécessaires à l'élimination d’introns mitochondriaux ou chloroplastiques spécifiques. L'analyse d'un troisième membre de la famille, uL18-L5, a révélé qu'il participait à l'épissage de nombreux introns mitochondriaux. Mes résultats ont permis de révéler que les facteurs dérivés des protéines ribosomales uL18 jouent un rôle essentiel dans l’épissage des introns du groupe II mitochondriaux ou chloroplastiques chez les végétaux et que ces fonctions ciblent sot un seul intron ou bien plusieurs d’entre eux. / RNA expression in plant organelles implies a large number of post-transcriptional modifications in which intron splicing is an essential process. Based on RNA structures and splicing mechanisms, introns can be classified into two families and organellar introns of seed plants are categorized as group II. Organellar group II introns are highly degenerate and have lost the ability to self-splice in vivo. Their removal from transcripts is thus facilitated by numerous nuclear-encoded proteins that are post-translationaly imported into organelles. Among them, RNA binding proteins play predominant roles in this complex process. Ribosomal proteins are abundant RNA-binding proteins and could be recruited to carry out multifarious auxiliary functions. During my thesis, I investigated the function of the uL18 ribosomal-like protein family in Arabidopsis that comprises 8 members. The members of this protein family share a rather degenerate but structurally conserved uL18 domain whose original function is to permit association with the 5S rRNA. Our results showed that five uL18-Like proteins are targeted to mitochondria and three to chloroplasts. Two of these proteins correspond to real ribosomal uL18 proteins that incorporate into organellar ribosomes, while two other members (uL18-L1 and uL18-L8) have turned into splicing factors and are required for the removal of specific mitochondrial or plastid group II introns. The analysis of a third member, uL18-L5, revealed that it participated in the splicing of numerous mitochondrial introns. Our results revealed that uL18-like factors play essential roles in group II intron splicing in both mitochondria and plastids of plants and that these functions could target a single or multiple introns.
3

A NOVEL ROLE FOR dADAR ISOFORMS IN DROSOPHILA rnp-4f 5'-UTR INTRON SPLICING REGULATION

Gangapatnam, Girija Lakshmi 02 May 2012 (has links)
No description available.
4

An experimental and genomic approach to the regulation of alternative pre-mRNA splicing in Drosophila rnp-4f

Fetherson, Rebecca A. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Miami University, Dept. of Zoology, 2005. / Title from first page of PDF document. Document formatted into pages; contains [1], ix, 75 p. : ill. Includes bibliographical references (p. 69-75).
5

An experimental and genomic approach to the regulation of alternative pre-mRNA splicing in Drosophila rnp-4f

Fetherson, Rebecca A. 30 April 2005 (has links)
No description available.
6

Co-transcriptional recruitment of the U1 snRNP

Kotovic, Kimberly Marie 16 November 2004 (has links)
It is currently believed that the splicing of most pre-mRNAs occurs, at least in part, co-transcriptionally. In order to validate this principle in yeast and establish an experimental system for monitoring spliceosome assembly in vivo, I have employed the chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay to study co-transcriptional splicing events. Here, I use ChIP to examine key questions with respect to the recent proposal that RNA polymerase II (Pol II) recruits pre-mRNA splicing factors to active genes. In my thesis, I address: 1) whether the U1 snRNP, which binds to the 5¡¦ splice site of each intron, is recruited co-transcriptionally in vivo and 2) if so, where along the length of active genes the U1 snRNP is concentrated. U1 snRNP accumulates on downstream positions of genes containing introns but not within promoter regions or along intronless genes. More specifically, accumulation correlated with the presence and position of the intron, indicating that the intron is necessary for co-transcriptional U1 snRNP recruitment and/or retention (Kotovic et al., 2003). In contrast to capping enzymes, which bind directly to Pol II (Komarnitsky et al., 2000; Schroeder et al., 2000), the U1 snRNP is poorly detected in promoter regions, except in genes harboring promoter-proximal introns. Detection of the U1 snRNP is dependent on RNA synthesis and is abolished by intron removal. Microarray data reveals that intron-containing genes are preferentially selected by ChIP with the U1 snRNP furthermore indicating recruitment specificity to introns. Because U1 snRNP levels decrease on downstream regions of intron-containing genes with long second exons, our lab is expanding the study to 3¡¦ splice site factors in hopes to address co-transcriptional splicing. In my thesis, I also focus on questions pertaining to the requirements for recruitment of the U1 snRNP to sites of transcription. To test the proposal that the cap-binding complex (CBC) promotes U1 snRNP recognition of the 5¡¦ splice site (Colot et al., 1996), I use a ?´CBC mutant strain and determine U1 snRNP accumulation by ChIP. Surprisingly, lack of the CBC has no effect on U1 snRNP recruitment. The U1 snRNP component Prp40p has been identified as playing a pivotal role in not only cross-intron bridging (Abovich and Rosbash, 1997), but also as a link between Pol II transcription and splicing factor recruitment (Morris and Greenleaf, 2000). My data shows that Prp40p recruitment mirrors that of other U1 snRNP proteins, in that it is not detected on promoter regions, suggesting that Prp40p does not constitutively bind the phosphorylated C-terminal domain (CTD) of Pol II as previously proposed. This physical link between Pol II transcription and splicing factor recruitment is further tested in Prp40p mutant strains, in which U1 snRNP is detected at normal levels. Therefore, U1 snRNP recruitment to transcription units is not dependent on Prp40p activity. My data indicates that co-transcriptional U1 snRNP recruitment is not dependent on the CBC or Prp40p and that any effects of these players on spliceosome assembly must be reflected in later spliceosome events. My data contrasts the proposed transcription factory model in which Pol II plays a central role in the recruitment of mRNA processing factors to TUs. According to my data, splicing factor recruitment acts differently than capping enzyme and 3¡¦ end processing factor recruitment; U1 snRNP does not accumulate at promoter regions of intron-containing genes or on intronless genes rather, accumulation is based on the synthesis of the intron. These experiments have lead me to propose a kinetic model with respect to the recruitment of splicing factors to active genes. In this model, U1 snRNP accumulation at the 5¡¦ splice site requires a highly dynamic web of protein-protein and protein-RNA interactions to occur, ultimately leading to the recruitment and/or stabilization of the U1 snRNP.
7

The Role of a Nuclear-Encoded DEAD-box Protein from <i>Saccharomyces</i> <i>cerevisiae</i> in Mitochondrial Group I Intron Splicing

Bifano, Abby Lynn Shumaker January 2010 (has links)
No description available.

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