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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

Comparative Genomics of the Microbial Chemotaxis System

Wuichet, Kristin 18 May 2007 (has links)
This research project presents a comprehensive functional analysis of a complex prokaryotic signal transduction system and the mechanisms underlying its evolution. The chemotaxis system regulates motility in prokaryotes and is their most complex signal transduction system. The system has been extensively characterized experimentally, but recent studies have created new questions about the function and origin of this system. Comparative genomics analyses are well-suited for studying the chemotaxis system since it is present in taxonomically diverse organisms. The first aim of this project is to understand the evolutionary history of the chemotaxis system that has resulted in the diversity of chemotaxis systems that have been experimentally. The results reveal three functional families of chemotaxis systems that regulate flagellar motility, type IV pili motility, and non-motility outputs. The flagellar family shows extensive diversity with 10 conserved classes that have variable accessory proteins, and these classes show a co-evolutionary relationship with flagella. The second aim of this project is to analyze the molecular evolution of chemotaxis system components and utilize that information to predict the contact sites involved in protein-protein interactions. The analysis supports that there is evolutionary pressure at the amino acid sequence level to maintain protein-protein interactions. From this observation, a method to predict the contact sites of protein-protein interactions from sequence information alone was developed and validated by experimental and structural information.
2

REGULATION OF CHOP TRANSLATION IN RESPONSE TO eIF2 PHOSPHORYLATION AND ITS ROLE IN CELL FATE

Palam, Lakshmi Reddy 11 December 2012 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / In response to different environmental stresses, phosphorylation of eukaryotic initiation factor-2 (eIF2) rapidly reduces protein synthesis, which lowers energy expenditure and facilitates reprogramming of gene expression to remediate stress damage. Central to the changes in gene expression, eIF2 phosphorylation also enhances translation of ATF4, a transcriptional activator of genes subject to the Integrated Stress Response (ISR). The ISR increases the expression of genes important for alleviating stress, or alternatively triggering apoptosis. One ISR target gene encodes the transcriptional regulator CHOP whose accumulation is critical for stress-induced apoptosis. In this dissertation research, I show that eIF2 phosphorylation induces preferential translation of CHOP by a mechanism involving a single upstream ORF (uORF) located in the 5’-leader of the CHOP mRNA. In the absence of stress and low eIF2 phosphorylation, translation of the uORF serves as a barrier that prevents translation of the downstream CHOP coding region. Enhanced eIF2 phosphorylation during stress facilitates ribosome bypass of the uORF, and instead results in the translation of CHOP. Stable cell lines were also constructed that express CHOP transcript containing the wild type uORF or deleted for the uORF and each were analyzed for expression changes in response to the different stress conditions. Increased CHOP levels due to the absence of inhibitory uORF sensitized the cells to stress-induced apoptosis when compared to the cells that express CHOP mRNA containing the wild type uORF. This new mechanism of translational control explains how expression of CHOP and the fate of cells are tightly linked to the levels of phosphorylated eIF2 and stress damage.

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