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Regulace exprese Ms1, sRNA z Mycobacterium smegmatis / Regulation of expression of Ms1, a sRNA from Mycobacterium smegmatisPáleníková, Petra January 2016 (has links)
Bacteria are exposed to various environmental conditions during their growth. They have to cope with rapid changes in temperature, lack of nutrition, etc. To survive, bacteria alter their gene expression. One type of regulation of gene expression is regulation by small RNAs (sRNAs). In bacteria, a well-studied sRNA is 6S RNA that binds to the RNA polymerase holoenzyme. However, 6S RNA has not been identified in several bacterial species. Mycobacteria are a genus that probably does not have 6S RNA. Instead, Mycobacterium smegmatis possess another sRNA - Ms1. Ms1 structurally resembles 6S RNA and indeed it was first identified as a 6S RNA structural homologue. However, Ms1 binds to RNAP devoid of any sigma factor, and, therefore, is significantly distinct from 6S RNA. This work describes regulation of expression of Ms1. DNA fragments of different length from the region upstream of the Ms1 gene were prepared. These fragments were fused to the lacZ reporter gene and their activity was tested in different growth phases and under stress. This allowed identification and characterization of the core promoter sequence and regulatory sequences that might interact with transcription factor(s). Promoter activity increased with increased length of the promoter fragment and after transition into stationary...
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Proteomanylse des Ribosoms und von Kompoenten der Apoptose in T-ZellenThiede, Bernd 13 November 2003 (has links)
Die Identifizierung von Apoptose-modifizierten Proteinen erfolgte durch Proteomanalyse per 2D-Gelelektrophorese und Massenspektrometrie. Zunächst wurde eine 2DE-Datenbank errichtet, die im Internet zugänglich ist. Die Identifikation von Proteinen durch Peptidmassenfingerabdruck konnte durch Verwendung einer zweiten Matrix verbessert werden. Die Analyse ausgelassener tryptischer Spaltstellen, N-terminaler Pyroglutamatbildung und Oxidation von Tryptophan konnte die Identifikation von Proteinen mittels Peptidmassenfingerabdruck verbessern. Die Apoptose wurde über den Fas-Rezeptor-Signalweg oder durch DNA-Schädigung mittels Cis-Platin eingeleitet und das Totallysat oder die Kompartimente von Jurkat T-Zellen der Proteomanalyse unterworfen. Große Übereinstimmungen der beiden Prozesse wurden festgestellt. 95 Apoptose-modifizierte Proteine wurden identifiziert, wovon 78 Proteine bisher unbekannt für den Apoptoseprozess waren. Auffällig war, dass 40 % der Proteine RNA-Bindungsmotive enthielten und das 21 Onkoprotein oder Onkoprotein-interagierende Proteine identifiziert wurden. Für 39 Proteine konnten bisher proteolytische Spaltungen vorausgesagt werden. Eine Fülle von Informationen wurde über putative Translokationen der Proteine erhalten. Für das Protein p54nrb wurden drei Caspase-3 Spaltstellen durch die Einführung von Mutationen und die Abhängigkeit der Caspase-3 Spaltung von RNA bewiesen. Mitochondriale ribosomale Proteine von Mensch, Maus und Ratte wurden durch Abgleichung von EST-Datenbanken mit partiellen Aminosäuresequenzen aus dem Rind bestimmt. Die Konservierung der Sequenzen der Säugetierproteine der mitochondrialen ribosomalen Proteinen war geringer als von den bekannten cytosolischen ribosomalen Proteinen. Weiterhin wurden unterschiedliche Ergebnisse bzgl. der mitochondrialen Signalsequenzen der Proteine gefunden. RNA-Protein-Wechselwirkungen im Ribosom wurden nach Quervernetzung auf einzelne Aminosäuen bzw. Nukleotide bestimmt. Die Daten wurden zur Verbesserung von ribosomalen Modellen verwendet. Die mittlerweile erhaltenen Kristallstrukturen des Ribosoms zeigten, dass die Ergebnisse der Quervernetzungsexperimente mit den tatsächlichen RNA-Protein-Wechselwirkungen weitgehend übereinstimmen. Die Affinität von verschiedenen Komponenten zu einem Zielmolekül zur Bildung von nicht-kovalenten RNA-Peptid-Wechselwirkungen wurde mit Hilfe von MALDI-MS ermittelt. Die Interaktionen sind stark abhängig von der Anzahl der Arginine. / Apoptosis-modified proteins were identified by proteome analysis via 2D gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry. First, a internet-accessible 2DE database was rendered. The identification of the proteins by peptide mass fingerprinting was improved using a second matrix. The analysis of missed tryptic cleavage sites, the formation of N-terminal pyroglutamine and oxidation of tryptophan could improve the identification of proteins by peptide mass fingerprinting. Apoptosis was induced via the Fas-receptor signaling pathway or by means of DNA damage by cis-platin. The total lysate and the compartments of Jurkat T cells were analyzed by proteome analysis. High similarities between both processes were observed. 95 apoptosis-modified proteins were identified, 78 of these were until now unknown to be involved in apoptosis. Noticeable, 40% of the proteins include a RNA-binding motif and 21 oncogene or oncogene-interacting proteins were identified. A proteolytic cleavage could be predicted for 39 proteins. Some information was received about the putative translocation of the proteins. Three caspase-3 cleavage sites were shown for the protein p54nrb with the incorporation of mutations. Furthermore, the caspase-3 cleavage was dependent on the occurrence of RNA. Mitochondrial ribosomal proteins of human, mouse and rat were determined by screening of EST-databases with partial amino acid sequences from bovine. The conservation of sequences of mammalian proteins of the mitochondrial ribosomal proteins was less than for known cytosolic ribosomal proteins. Furthermore, different results were obtained considering mitochondrial signal sequences. RNA-protein interaction within the ribosome were determined on single amino acids and nucleotides, respectively, after cross-linking. These data were used to improve models of the ribosome. The in the meantime obtained 3D-structures of the ribosome showed high consistency with the revealed RNA-protein interaction sites after cross-linking. The affinity of different components to a target molecule to form RNA-peptide interactions was determined by MALDI-MS. The interactions were strongly dependent on the number of arginines.
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Post-Transcriptional Regulation of the Murine Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase GeneSöderberg, Malin January 2005 (has links)
<p>Large amounts of nitric oxide (NO) are produced by the inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) upon inflammatory stimuli. NO is a multifaceted molecule, which may have beneficial effects as an antimicrobial agent in the immune defense, or cytotoxic effects in chronic inflammations, manifested as e.g. arthritis and asthma. Understanding the mode of regulation of the iNOS gene is a prerequisite for developing intervention strategies in various pathological conditions where detrimental effects of NO need to be prevented.</p><p>Transcriptional processes of the iNOS gene regulation are well described, while post-transcriptional events have not been studied in detail. The aim of the present thesis was to investigate post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms involving the 3’untranslated region (UTR) of the murine iNOS mRNA.</p><p>Inflammation-dependent RNA-protein interactions with the iNOS mRNA 3’UTR were characterized by RNA gel shift analysis and UV cross-linking. <i>Trans</i>-acting factors interacting with the 3’UTR were detected in mouse liver and macrophages and identified as heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNP) I and L. Western blot revealed that reduced hnRNPI levels are responsible for the decreased interaction of hnRNPI with iNOS 3’UTR upon induction in inflammatory conditions. This decrease was reversed by the glucocorticoid dexamethasone, concomitant with decreased iNOS mRNA levels and stability. Introduction of the iNOS 3’UTR into a luciferase reporter gene reduced its expression in macrophages. Upon deletions of the binding sites for hnRNPI and hnRNPL, the luciferase expression was recovered. In addition, inflammatory stimuli increased the luciferase activity of the construct with the full-length 3’UTR, while only weak effects of the stimuli were seen on the deletion constructs.</p><p>In conclusion, the results suggest that binding of hnRNPI and hnRNPL to the iNOS mRNA 3’UTR promotes degradation of the transcript. Induction of iNOS by inflammatory stimuli dissociates the RNA-protein complex, yielding a more stable mRNA. In addition, post-transcriptional down-regulation of the iNOS gene by the anti-inflammatory glucocorticoid dexamethasone, seems to involve hnRNPI.</p>
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Post-Transcriptional Regulation of the Murine Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase GeneSöderberg, Malin January 2005 (has links)
Large amounts of nitric oxide (NO) are produced by the inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) upon inflammatory stimuli. NO is a multifaceted molecule, which may have beneficial effects as an antimicrobial agent in the immune defense, or cytotoxic effects in chronic inflammations, manifested as e.g. arthritis and asthma. Understanding the mode of regulation of the iNOS gene is a prerequisite for developing intervention strategies in various pathological conditions where detrimental effects of NO need to be prevented. Transcriptional processes of the iNOS gene regulation are well described, while post-transcriptional events have not been studied in detail. The aim of the present thesis was to investigate post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms involving the 3’untranslated region (UTR) of the murine iNOS mRNA. Inflammation-dependent RNA-protein interactions with the iNOS mRNA 3’UTR were characterized by RNA gel shift analysis and UV cross-linking. Trans-acting factors interacting with the 3’UTR were detected in mouse liver and macrophages and identified as heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNP) I and L. Western blot revealed that reduced hnRNPI levels are responsible for the decreased interaction of hnRNPI with iNOS 3’UTR upon induction in inflammatory conditions. This decrease was reversed by the glucocorticoid dexamethasone, concomitant with decreased iNOS mRNA levels and stability. Introduction of the iNOS 3’UTR into a luciferase reporter gene reduced its expression in macrophages. Upon deletions of the binding sites for hnRNPI and hnRNPL, the luciferase expression was recovered. In addition, inflammatory stimuli increased the luciferase activity of the construct with the full-length 3’UTR, while only weak effects of the stimuli were seen on the deletion constructs. In conclusion, the results suggest that binding of hnRNPI and hnRNPL to the iNOS mRNA 3’UTR promotes degradation of the transcript. Induction of iNOS by inflammatory stimuli dissociates the RNA-protein complex, yielding a more stable mRNA. In addition, post-transcriptional down-regulation of the iNOS gene by the anti-inflammatory glucocorticoid dexamethasone, seems to involve hnRNPI.
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Nature du complexe viral impliqué dans le mouvement à longue distance du virus de la jaunisse du navet / Nature of the viral complex involved in the long distance movement of Turnip yellows virusHipper, Clémence 20 September 2013 (has links)
Le projet de thèse consistait à étudier le mouvement du Virus de la jaunisse du navet (TuYV) dans le système vasculaire. Le premier objectif était d’identifier la nature du complexe viral cheminant dans les tubes criblés : virions et/ou complexes ribonucléoprotéiques. L’analyse du mouvement de mutants viraux dans différentes espèces végétales, en absence ou en présence de protéines de capside de type sauvage apportées en trans, a permis de démontrer une étroite relation entre la formation de virions et le transport à longue distance. Le second objectif de cette étude portait sur l’identification de partenaires cellulaires de la protéine P4 du TuYV. Deux protéines ont été identifiées par un criblage de banques d’ADNc d’A. thaliana par le système du double hybride dans la levure, et l’analyse de leur implication dans le cycle viral a été amorcée par des expériences de localisation subcellulaire et de validation fonctionnelle in planta. / In the project, Turnip yellows virus (TuYV) transport in the phloem was analysed. The first objective was to identify the nature of the viral complex involved in vascular movement: virions and/or ribonucleoprotein complexes. Mutant viruses were modified in the capsid protein gene to inhibit formation of virions. By analyzing their movement in different host plants, in the absence or in the presence of the wild-type capsid proteins brought in trans, we demonstrated a strong relation between virion formation and virus long-distance movement. The second objective was to identify cellular partners of the TuYV-P4 protein, a putative movement protein which is host-specific. Two proteins were identified by screening a cDNA library of A. thaliana using the yeast two hybrid technique, and their function in the virus cycle was assessed by performing sub-cellular localizations and infection of A. thaliana KO mutants.
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Structural and Conformational Feature of RNA DuplexesSenthil Kuma, DK January 2014 (has links) (PDF)
In recent years, several interesting biological roles played by RNA have come to light. Apart from their known role in translation of genetic information from DNA to protein, they have been shown to act as enzymes as well as regulators of gene expression. Protein-RNA complexes are involved in regulating cellular processes like cell division, differentiation, growth, cell aging and death. A number of clinically important viruses have RNA as their genetic material. Defective RNA molecules have been linked to a number of human diseases. The ability of RNA to adopt stunningly complex three-dimensional structures aids in diverse functions like catalysis, metabolite sensing and transcriptional control. Several secondary structure motifs are observed in RNA, of which the double-helical RNA motif is ubiquitous and well characterized. Though DNA duplexes have been shown to be present in many polymorphic states, RNA duplexes are believed to exhibit conservatism. Early fibre diffraction analysis on molecular structures of natural and synthetically available oligo- and polynucleotides suggested that the double-helical structures of RNA might exist in two forms: A-form and A′-form. New improved crystallographic methods have contributed to the increased availability of atomic resolution structures of many biologically significant RNA molecules.
With the available structural information, it is feasible to try and understand the contribution of the variations at the base pair, base-pair step and backbone torsion angle level to the overall structure of the RNA duplex. Further, the effect of protein binding on RNA structure has not been extensively analysed. These studies have not been investigated in greater detail due to the focus of the research community on understanding conformational changes in proteins when bound to RNA, and due to the lack of a significant number of solved RNA structures in both free and protein-bound state. While studies on the conformation of the DNA double-helical stem have moved beyond the dinucleotide step into tri-, tetra-, hexa- and octanucleotide levels, similar knowledge for RNA even at the dinucleotide step level is lacking.
In this thesis, the results of detailed analyses to understand the contribution of the base sequence towards RNA conformational variability as well as the structural changes incurred upon protein binding are reported.
Objectives
The primary objective of this thesis is to understand the following through detailed analyses of all available high-resolution crystal structures of RNA.
1 Exploring sequence-dependent variations exhibited by dinucleotide steps formed by Watson-Crick (WC) base pairs in RNA duplexes.
2 Identifying sequence-dependent variations exhibited by dinucleotide steps containing non-Watson-Crick (NWC) base pairs in RNA duplexes.
3 Developing a web application for the generation of sequence-dependent non-uniform nucleic acid structures.
4 Investigating the relationship between base sequence and backbone torsion-angle preferences in RNA double helices followed by molecular dynamics simulation using various force fields, to check their ability to reproduce the above experimental findings.
Chapter 1 gives an overview of the structural features and polymorphic states of RNA duplexes and the present understanding of the structural architecture of RNA, thereby laying the background to the studies carried out subsequently. The chapter also gives a brief description on the methodologies applied. Relevant methodologies and protocols are dealt with in detail in the respective chapters.
Sequence-dependent base-pair step geometries in RNA duplexes
A complete understanding of the conformational variability seen in duplex RNA molecules at the dinucleotide step level can aid in the understanding of their function. This work was carried out to derive geometric information using a non-redundant RNA crystal structure dataset and to understand the conformational features (base pair and base-pair step parameters) involving all Watson-Crick (WC) (Chapter 2) and non-Watson-Crick (NWC) base pairs (Chapter 3). The sequence-dependent variations exhibited by the base-pair steps in RNA duplexes are elaborated. Further, potential non-canonical hydrogen bond interactions in the steps are identified and their relationship with dinucleotide step geometry is discussed. Comparison of the features of dinucleotide steps between free and protein-bound RNA datasets suggest variations at the base-pair step level on protein binding, which are more pronounced in non-Watson-Crick base pair containing steps.
Chapter 4 describes a web-server NUCGEN-Plus, developed for building and regeneration of curved and non-uniform DNA and RNA duplexes. The main algorithm is a modification of our earlier program NUCGEN that worked mainly for DNA. The WC step parameters and intra-base parameters for RNA were obtained from the work detailed in Chapter 2. The FORTRAN code and input sequence file format was modified. The program has two modules: a) Using the model-building module, the program can build duplex structures for a given input DNA/RNA sequence. Options are available for selecting various derived or user specified base-pair step parameters, and fibre diffraction parameters that can be used in the building process. The program can generate double-helical structures up to 2000 nucleotides in length. In addition, the program can calculate the curvature of the generated duplex at defined length scale. b) Using the regeneration module, double-helical structures of nucleic acids can be rebuilt from the existing solved structures. Further, variants of an existing structure can be generated by varying the input geometric parameters. The web-server has a user-friendly interface and is freely available in the public domain at: http://nucleix.mbu.iisc.ernet.in/nucgenplus/index.html
Sequence dependence of backbone torsion angle conformers in RNA duplexes
RNA molecules consist of covalently linked nucleotide units. Each of these units has six rigid torsional degrees of freedom (α, β, γ, δ, ε, and ζ) for the backbone and one (χ) around the glycosidic bond connecting the base to the ribose, thereby providing conformational flexibility. An understanding of the relationship between base sequence and structural variations along the backbone can help deduce the rationale for sequence conservation and also their functional importance. Chapter 5 describes in detail the torsion angle-dependent variations seen in dinucleotide steps of RNA duplex. A non-redundant, high resolution (≤2.5Å) crystal structure dataset was created. Base-specific preferences for the backbone and glycosidic torsion angles were observed. Non-A-form torsion angle conformers were found to have a greater prevalence in protein-bound duplexes. Further validation of the above observation was performed by analysing the RNA backbone conformers and the effect of protein binding, in the crystal structure of E. coli 70S ribosome.
Chapter 5 further describes the molecular dynamics simulation studies carried out to understand the effect of force fields on the RNA backbone conformer preferences. A 33mer long duplex was simulated using seven different force fields available in AMBER and CHARMM program, each for 100 ns. Trajectory analyses suggest the presence of sequence-dependent torsion angle preferences. Torsion angle conformer distribution closer to that of crystal structures was observed in the system simulated using parmbsc0 force field.
Molecular dynamics simulation studies of AU/AU base-pair step
A unique geometric feature, unlike that in other purine-pyrimidine (RY) steps in the crystal dataset analysis, was reported for AU/AU step (see Chapter 2). Appendix 1 describes the work carried out to validate these features observed in the crystal structures using simulation studies. Additionally, the effect of nearest-neighbor base pairs on the AU/AU step geometry were examined.
General Conclusion
Overall, the findings of this thesis work suggest that RNA duplexes exhibit sequence-dependent structural variations and sample a large volume of the double-helical conformational space. Further, protein binding affects the local base-pair step geometry and backbone conformation.
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Role of post-transcriptional regulation in human liverChaturvedi, Praneet 11 February 2015 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / My thesis comprises of two individual projects which revolve around the importance of post-transcriptional regulation in liver. My first project is studying the integrated miRNA – mRNA network in NAFLD. For fulfillment of the study we conducted a genome-wide study to identify microRNAs (miRs) as well as the miR-mRNA regulatory network associated with hepatic fat and NAFLD. Hepatic fat content (HFC), miR and mRNA expression were assessed in 73 human liver samples. Liver histology of 49 samples was further characterized into normal (n=33) and NAFLD (n=16). Liver miRNome and transcriptome were significantly associated with HFC and utilized to (a) build miR-mRNA association networks in NAFLD and normal livers separately based on the potential miR-mRNA targeting and (b) conduct pathway enrichment analyses. We identified 62 miRs significantly correlated with HFC (p < 0.05 with q < 0.15), with miR-518b and miR-19b being most positively and negatively correlated with HFC, respectively (p < 0.008 for both). Integrated network analysis showed that six miRs (miRs-30b*, 612, 17*, 129-5p, 204 and 20a) controlled ~ 70% of 151 HFC-associated mRNAs (p < 0.001 with q < 0.005). Pathway analyses of these HFC-associated mRNA revealed their key effect (p<0.05) in inflammation pathways and lipid metabolism. Further, significant (p<2.47e-4, Wilcoxon test) reduction in degree of negative associations for HFC-associated miRs with HFC-associated mRNAs was observed in NAFLD as compared to normal livers, strongly suggesting highly dysfunctional miR-mRNA post-transcriptional regulatory network in NAFLD. Our study makes several novel observations which provide clues to better understand the pathogenesis and potential treatment targets of NAFLD.
My second project is based on uncovering important players of post-transcriptional regulation (RBPs) and how they are associated with age and gender during healthy liver development. For this study, we performed an association analysis focusing on the expression changes of 1344 RNA Binding proteins (RBPs) as a function of age and gender in human liver. We identify 88 and 45 RBPs to be significantly associated with age and gender respectively. Experimental verification of several of the predicted associations in the mouse model confirmed our findings. Our results suggest that a small fraction of the gender-associated RBPs (~40%) are likely to be up-regulated in males. Altogether, these observations show that several of these RBPs are important developmentally conserved regulators. Further analysis of the protein interaction network of RBPs associated with age and gender based on the centrality measures like degree, betweenness and closeness revealed that several of these RBPs might be prominent players in liver development and impart gender specific alterations in gene expression via the formation of protein complexes. Indeed, both age and gender-associated RBPs in liver were found to show significantly higher clustering coefficients and network centrality measures compared to non-associated RBPs. The compendium of RBPs and this study will help us gain insight into the role of post-transcriptional regulatory molecules in aging and gender specific expression of genes.
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Discovery and evolutionary dynamics of RBPs and circular RNAs in mammalian transcriptomesBadve, Abhijit 30 March 2015 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) are vital post-transcriptional regulatory molecules in transcriptome of mammalian species. It necessitates studying their expression dynamics to extract how post-transcriptional networks work in various mammalian tissues. RNA binding proteins (RBPs) play important roles in controlling the post-transcriptional fate of RNA molecules, yet their evolutionary dynamics remains largely unknown. As expression profiles of genes encoding for RBPs can yield insights about their evolutionary trajectories on the post-transcriptional regulatory networks across species, we performed a comparative analyses of RBP expression profiles across 8 tissues (brain, cerebellum, heart, lung, liver, lung, skeletal muscle, testis) in 11 mammals (human, chimpanzee, gorilla, orangutan, macaque, rat, mouse, platypus, opossum, cow) and chicken & frog (evolutionary outgroups). Noticeably, orthologous gene expression profiles suggest a significantly higher expression level for RBPs than their non-RBP gene counterparts, which include other protein-coding and non-coding genes, across all the mammalian tissues studied here. This trend is significant irrespective of the tissue and species being compared, though RBP gene expression distribution patterns were found to be generally diverse in nature. Our analysis also shows that RBPs are expressed at a significantly lower level in human and mouse tissues compared to their expression levels in equivalent tissues in other mammals: chimpanzee, orangutan, rat, etc., which are all likely exposed to diverse natural habitats and ecological settings compared to more stable ecological environment humans and mice might have been exposed, thus reducing the need for complex and extensive post-transcriptional control. Further analysis of the similarity of orthologous RBP expression profiles between all pairs of tissue-mammal combinations clearly showed the grouping of RBP expression profiles across tissues in a given mammal, in contrast to the clustering of expression profiles for non-RBPs, which frequently grouped equivalent tissues across diverse mammalian species together, suggesting a significant evolution of RBPs expression after speciation events. Calculation of species specificity indices (SSIs) for RBPs across various tissues, to identify those that exhibited restricted expression to few mammals, revealed that about 30% of the RBPs are species-specific in at least one tissue studied here, with lung, liver, kidney & testis exhibiting a significantly higher proportion of species specifically expressed RBPs. We conducted a differential expression analysis of RBPs in human, mouse and chicken tissues to study the evolution of expression levels in recently evolved species (i.e., humans and mice) than evolutionarily-distant species (i.e., chickens). We identified more than 50% of the orthologous RBPs to be differentially expressed in at least one tissue, compared between human and mouse, but not so between human and an outgroup chicken, in which RBP expression levels are relatively conserved. Among the studied tissues (brain, liver and kidney) showed a higher fraction of differentially expressed RBPs, which may suggest hyper- regulatory activities by RBPs in these tissues with species evolution. Overall, this study forms a foundation for understanding the evolution of expression levels of RBPs in mammals, facilitating a snapshot of the wiring patterns of post-transcriptional regulatory networks in mammalian genomes. In our second study, we focused on elucidating novel features of post-transcriptional regulatory molecules called as circRNA from LongPolyA RNA-sequence data. The debate over presence of nonlinear exon splicing such as exon-shuffling or formation of circularized forms has finally come to an end as numerous repertoires have shown of their occurrence and presence through transcriptomic analyses. It is evident from previous studies that along with consensus-site splicing non-consensus site splicing is robustly occurring in the cell. Also, in spite of applying different high-throughput approaches (both computational and experimental) to determine their abundance, the signal is consistent and strongly conforming the plausible circularization mechanisms. Earlier studies hypothesized and hence focused on the ribo-minus non-polyA RNA-sequence data to identify circular RNA structures in cell and compared their abundance levels with their linear counterparts. Thus far, the studies show their conserved nature across tissues and species also that they are not translated and preferentially are without poly (A) tail, with one to five exons long. Much of this initial work has been performed using non-polyA sequencing thus probably underestimates the abundance of circular RNAs originating from long poly (A) RNA isoforms. Our hypothesis is if the circular RNA events are not the artifact of random events, but has a structured and defined mechanism for their formation, then there would not be biases on preferential selection / leaving of polyA tails, while forming the circularized isoforms. We have applied an existing computational pipeline from earlier studies by Memczack et. al., on ENCODE cell-lines long poly (A) RNA-sequence data. With the same pipeline, we achieve a significant number of circular RNA isoforms in the data, some of which are overlapping with known circular RNA isoforms from the literature. We identified an approach and worked upon to identify the precise structure of circular RNA, which is not plausible from the existing computational approaches. We aim to study their expression profiles in normal and cancer cell-lines, and see if there exists any pattern and functional significance based on their abundance levels in the cell.
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Mechanisms of recruitment of the CTD phosphatase Rtr1 to RNA polymerase IIBerna, Michael J., Sr. 19 October 2012 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / The C-terminal domain (CTD) of the RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) subunit Rpb1 must exist in a hypophosphorylated state prior to forming a competent transcription initiation complex. However, during transcription, specific kinases and phosphatases act on the RNAPII CTD to regulate its phosphorylation state, which serves to recruit sequence-specific and general transcription factors at the appropriate stage of transcription. A key phosphatase involved in this process, Rtr1 (Regulator of Transcription 1), was shown to regulate a key step important for transcription elongation and termination. Although the role that Rtr1 plays in regulating RNAPII transcription has been described, the mechanism involved in the recruitment of Rtr1 to RNAPII during transcription has not been elucidated in yeast. Consequently, the present work utilized both affinity purification schemes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and mass spectrometry to identify key Rtr1-interacting proteins and post-translational modifications that potentially play a role in recruiting Rtr1 to RNAPII. In addition to RNAPII subunits, which were the most consistently enriched Rtr1-interacting proteins, seven proteins were identified that are potentially involved in Rtr1 recruitment. These included PAF complex subunits (Cdc73, Ctr9, Leo1), the heat shock protein Hsc82, the GTPase Npa3, the ATPase Rpt6, and Spn1. Indirect evidence was also uncovered that implicates that the CTDK-I complex, a kinase involved in RNAPII CTD phosphorylation, is important in facilitating interactions between Rtr1, RNAPII, and select transcription factors. Additionally, a putative phosphorylation site was identified on Ser217 of Rtr1 that may also play a role in its recruitment to RNAPII during transcription.
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Transcriptional regulation of ATF4 is critical for controlling the Integrated Stress Response during eIF2 phosphorylationDey, Souvik 29 October 2012 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / In response to different environmental stresses, phosphorylation of eIF2 (eIF2P) represses global translation coincident with preferential translation of ATF4. ATF4 is a transcriptional activator of the integrated stress response, a program of gene expression involved in metabolism, nutrient uptake, anti-oxidation, and the activation of additional transcription factors, such as CHOP/GADD153, that can induce apoptosis. Although eIF2P elicits translational control in response to many different stress arrangements, there are selected stresses, such as exposure to UV irradiation, that do not increase ATF4 expression despite robust eIF2P. In this study we addressed the underlying mechanism for variable expression of ATF4 in response to eIF2P during different stress conditions and the biological significance of omission of enhanced ATF4 function. We show that in addition to translational control, ATF4 expression is subject to transcriptional regulation. Stress conditions such as endoplasmic reticulum stress induce both transcription and translation of ATF4, which together enhance expression of ATF4 and its target genes in response to eIF2P. By contrast, UV irradiation represses ATF4 transcription, which diminishes ATF4 mRNA available for translation during eIF2∼P. eIF2P enhances cell survival in response to UV irradiation. However, forced expression of ATF4 and its target gene CHOP leads to increased sensitivity to UV irradiation. In this study, we also show that C/EBPβ is a transcriptional repressor of ATF4 during UV stress. C/EBPβ binds to critical elements in the ATF4 promoter resulting in its transcriptional repression. The LIP isoform of C/EBPβ, but not the LAP version is regulated following UV exposure and directly represses ATF4 transcription. Loss of the LIP isoform results in increased ATF4 mRNA levels in response to UV irradiation, and subsequent recovery of ATF4 translation, leading to enhanced expression of its target genes. Together these results illustrate how eIF2P and translational control, combined with transcription factors regulated by alternative signaling pathways, can direct programs of gene expression that are specifically tailored to each environmental stress.
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