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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.
11

Régulations traductionnelles de l'embryon précoce d'oursin : recrutement des ARNm dans les polysomes à la fécondation / Translational regulations in early sea urchin embryo : mRNA recruitment into polysomes at fertilization

Chassé, Héloïse 08 December 2015 (has links)
La synthèse protéique est une étape importante de la régulation de l'expression des gènes. Dans beaucoup d'espèces animales, les premières étapes du développement embryonnaire sont majoritairement ou exclusivement basées sur l'utilisation des messagers maternels stockés dans l'ovocyte. L'embryon d'oursin est un modèle avantageux pour l'étude du contrôle traductionnel de l'expression des gènes lors du développement précoce. La fécondation provoque l'activation de la machinerie traductionnelle conduisant à une augmentation de synthèse protéique nécessaire à la reprise des cycles mitotiques et au départ du développement embryonnaire. Les modifications touchant la machinerie traductionnelle qui ont lieu à la fécondation sont à l'origine du recrutement polysomal des messagers stockés. Ainsi, l'ensemble des ARNm maternels est-il globalement traduit, ou existe-t-il une sélection des ARNm qui vont être traduits précocement ? Et s'il y en a, quels sont les modes de sélection ? Au cours de ce travail de thèse, nous avons obtenu le répertoire complet des ARNm traductionnellement régulés à la fécondation, et montré que seule une sous-partie du stock de messager est traduite en réponse à la fécondation, avec un enrichissement de messagers codant pour des protéines régulatrices. Enfin, de manière originale, ce travail a permis la mise en évidence de la diversité et de la complexité des voies de signalisation en amont de la régulation traductionnelle, qui concourent à la sélectivité de la traduction. / Protein synthesis is a crucial step for gene expression regulation. In many animal species, the early steps of development are based on translation of stored maternal mRNAs. Sea urchin embryo is a powerful model to study translational control during early development. Fertilization triggers the activation of translational machinery, leading to the increase of protein synthesis which is necessary to cell cycle entry and early embryonic development. Translational machinery modifications are responsible for the polysomal recruitment of the stored maternal mRNAs. Thus, are all the stored maternal mRNAs translated, or is there any selection of the translated mRNAs? If so, what are the mechanisms driving this selectivity? Over this work, we obtained the entire subset of the translationally regulated mRNAs, and demonstrated that only a part of the stored maternal mRNAs is actively translated at sea urchin fertilization, with an important enrichment of mRNAs coding for regulatory proteins. Finally, this work highlighted the diversity and the complexity of the signaling network upstream the selective polysomal recruitment.
12

The role of alsin in early Xenopus development

Gill, Pendeep January 2012 (has links)
Mutation within the human ALS2 gene, which encodes the protein Alsin, causes a number of recessive motor neuron diseases. The ALS2 gene encodes a 180kDa protein, which has been shown to localize to early endosomes. The Alsin protein comprises three predicted guanine exchange factor (GEF) domains, the best characterised of which is the VPS9 domain for Rab5 GTPase, which is involved in the endocytosis membrane trafficking pathway, particularly in the docking and fusion of early endosomes. Furthermore, Alsin contains a Rho-GEF domain which specifically interacts with Rac-1 GTPase in the PI3K/AKT signal transduction pathway. This pathway has been implicated in numerous biological processes, including control of protein translation, via the mTOR branch of the pathway. To date, most work on the human ALS2 disease phenotypes has focused on the role of alsin in membrane trafficking, and neglected alsin’s potential role in signalling via its Rho-GEF domain. The focus of this project was to study the role of alsin in signalling during early Xenopus development, a period rich in well-characterised cell-cell signalling. I have shown that alsin is maternally loaded and zygotically expressed in the early Xenopus embryo. In cell culture, alsin is localised to early endosomes. Knockdown of alsin protein through the use of mopholinos (MO), resulted in a gastrulation defect, in particular, failure to close the blastopore caused by disrupted mesoderm induction and convergent extension movements. An animal cap assay was used to study mesoderm induction in the presence of als2-MO and activin protein, a potent mesoderm inducer. These animal caps extended normally, indicating proper mesoderm induction. By contrast, als2-MO animal caps failed to extend when co-injected with activin mRNA suggesting that alsin is important for the production and/or secretion of the activin ligand in the source cell. Subsequently it was determined that knockdown of alsin reduced the precursor protein levels of TGF-β family members activin and Xnr-2. These results suggest a novel role for alsin in mRNA stability, translational regulation or post-translational control of specific mesoderm-inducer mRNAs.
13

Mechanisms of Post-transcriptional Regulation of Cat-1 Gene Expression by Amino Acid Starvation

Yaman, Ibrahim 05 July 2005 (has links)
No description available.
14

New Insights Into the Relationship Between Messenger RNA Translation and Degradation

Sweet, Thomas Jeffrey January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
15

Translational Control of Maternal mRNA in Mouse Oocytes

Romasko, Edward Joseph January 2014 (has links)
In contrast to other species, localized maternal mRNAs are not believed to be prominent features of mammalian oocytes. Due to the lack of transcription in the fully-grown oocyte, critical oocyte processes including cell cycle progression, chromosome segregation, formation and maintenance of the meiotic metaphase spindles, maternal mRNA recruitment and degradation, fertilization and egg activation are all under post-transcriptional, translational, or post-translational control. Despite advances in understanding mechanisms regulating the translational control of cytoplasmic maternal mRNAs, it is unknown whether localized maternal mRNAs exist in mouse oocytes and what mechanisms are responsible for their control. Maternal mRNAs were isolated from metaphase II (MII) mouse oocytes, microsurgically-removed MII spindle-chromosome complexes, and enucleated MII oocytes and analyzed by cDNA microarray analysis. The analysis identified enrichment for maternal mRNAs encoding spindle and other proteins on the mouse oocyte metaphase II (MII) spindle. Maternal mRNAs involved in cellular compartments and processes related to the cytoskeleton, chromatin/nucleus, and cellular signaling were enriched on the MII spindle. Using immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy, MIS18A, a protein encoded by a spindle-localized maternal mRNA, was confirmed to be associated with the MII spindle along with components of the ribosome translational machinery. The key translational regulator, EIF4EBP1, was observed to undergo a dynamic and complex spatially regulated pattern of phosphorylation at sites that regulate its association with EIF4E and its ability to repress translation. These phosphorylation variants appeared at different positions along the spindle at different stages of meiosis. Overexpression of EIF4EBP1 mutants had a profound effect on the maintenance of MII arrest. Approximately 24% of oocytes expressing a phosphodeficient (Threonine 69 to Alanine) EIF4EBP1 mutant underwent spontaneous activation, suggesting EIF4EBP1 phosphorylation is important for translation of maternal mRNAs and maintenance of MII arrest. These results indicate that dynamic spatially restricted patterns of EIF4EBP1 phosphorylation may promote localized mRNA translation to support spindle formation, maintenance, function, and other nearby processes. Regulated EIF4EBP1 phosphorylation at the spindle may help coordinate spindle formation with progression through the cell cycle. The discovery that EIF4EBP1 may be part of an overall mechanism that integrates and couples cell cycle progression to mRNA translation and subsequent spindle formation and function may be relevant to understanding mechanisms leading to diminished oocyte quality, and potential means of avoiding such defects. The localization of maternal mRNAs at the spindle is evolutionarily conserved between mammals and other vertebrates and is also seen in mitotic cells, indicating that EIF4EBP1 control of localized mRNA translation is likely key to correct segregation of genetic material across cell types. / Molecular Biology and Genetics
16

Norovirus translation and replication

Lu, Jia January 2018 (has links)
Human norovirus (HuNoV) is the leading cause of gastroenteritis worldwide. Despite the significant disease and economic burden, currently there are no licensed vaccines or antivirals. The understanding of norovirus biology has been hampered by the inability to cultivate HuNoV in cell culture. To establish a tissue culture system, infectious HuNoVs were purified from clinical stool samples. HuNoV replication was tested in different cell types. The B-cell and intestinal organoids culture systems were validated. In addition, using organoids culture a DNA-based reverse genetic system was shown to recover infectious HuNoV. Due to the challenges associated with cultivating HuNoV, murine norovirus (MNV) was used as a surrogate system to understand the role of eIF4E phosphorylation in norovirus pathogenesis, and VP1-RdRp interaction in regulating viral genome replication. MNV infection results in the phosphorylation of the translation initiation factor eIF4E, re-programming host-cell translation during infection. Inhibiting eIF4E phosphorylation reduces MNV replication in cell culture suggesting a role in viral replication. A mouse model with eIF4E S209A, a phosphor-ablative mutation, was established to understand the role of eIF4E phosphorylation in MNV pathogenesis. In vitro and in vivo characterisations demonstrated that eIF4E phosphorylation may have multiple roles in norovirus-host interactions, but overall has little impact on MNV pathogenesis. The shell domain (SD) of norovirus major capsid protein VP1 interacts with viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp) in a genogroup-specific manner to enhance de novo initiation of RdRp, and to promote negative-strand RNA synthesis. To understand how VP1 regulates norovirus genome replication, chimeric MNVs with genogroup-specific residues mutagenised were characterised in vitro and in vivo. A single amino acid mutation was shown to destabilise viral capsid. SDs with reduced VP1-RdRp interaction showed less capacity to stimulate RdRp, resulting in delayed virus replication. In vivo, the replication of an MNV-3 with homologous mutations was abolished, highlighting the crucial role of this interaction.
17

CPEB4 replaces CPEB1 to complete meiosis

Igea Fernández, Ana 06 November 2009 (has links)
In vertebrate oocytes, meiotic progression is driven by the sequential translational activation of maternal messenger RNAs stored in the cytoplasm. This activation is mainly induced by the cytoplasmic elongation of their poly(A) tails, which is mediated by the cytoplasmic polyadenylation element (CPE) present in their 3’ untranslated regions (3´ UTRs). Sequential, phase-specific translation of these maternal mRNAs is required to complete the two meiotic divisions. Although the earlier polyadenylation events in prophase I and metaphase I are driven by the CPE-binding protein 1 (CPEB1), 90% of this protein is degraded by the anaphase promoting complex in the first meiotic division. The low levels of CPEB1 during interkinesis and in metaphase II raise the question of how the cytoplasmic polyadenylation required for the second meiotic division is achieved. In this work, we demonstrate that CPEB1 activates the translation of the maternal mRNA encoding CPEB4, which, in turn, recruits the cytoplasmic poly(A) polymerase GLD2 to “late” CPE-regulated mRNAs driving the transition from metaphase I to metaphase II, and, therefore, replacing CPEB1 for “late” meiosis polyadenylation.
18

Aspekte der Translationskontrolle in der Drosophila-Spermatogenese: Charakterisierung regulatorischer Elemente / Aspects of translational control in the Drosophila-spermatogenesis: characterization of regulatory elements

Schreiter, Kay 29 January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
19

Estudo da função dos genes Pumilio de Arabidopsis durante o desenvolvimento vegetal / Study of PUMILIO genes function of Arabidopsis during plant developrnent

Favaro, Elaine Cristina 16 April 2007 (has links)
A família PUF é um conjunto de proteínas que se ligam a mRNA regulando sua estabilidade e tradução em processos chave do desenvolvimento. Entre as 25 proteínas de Arabidopsis contendo as repetições PUF, três delas, APUM-I, APUM-2 e APUM-3, apresentam ~90% de identidade e colocalizam temporal e espacialmente nos meristemas apical e axilares de caule, zona de elongação da raiz e no periciclo durante a formação de calos e de raízes laterais, além de estames e polens. Ensaios de RT-PCR mostraram que a relação de expressão entre eles é a mesma em todos os órgãos analisados. Além disso, plantas nocautes apum-1- e apum-2- não apresentam fenótipo alterado, sugerindo redundância funcional. Plantas com a expressão dessas proteínas afetadas por RNA antisense apresentaram folhas cloróticas e reduzidas, raízes mais curtas e menos ramificadas e baixa fertilidade, fenótipo semelhante ao de plantas que superexpressam KRP-2, um inibidor de CDK. O transcrito KRP-2 apresenta um elemento de ligação AraPum no 3\'-UTR sugerindo ser um possível alvo para APUM. Em adição, plantas antisense têm aumento de transcritos KRP-2 em relação a selvagens. Assim, foi proposto que essas proteínas agem coordenando a formação de folhas e raízes pela influência na tradução de KRP-2. A função ancestral das proteínas PUF de manter o ciclo celular em detrimento da diferenciação, parece ser conservada em plantas. / The PUF family is a group of conserved proteins that bind to rnRNAs regulating its stability and translation in key developrnental processes. Among the twenty five Arabidopsis proteins with PUF repeats, we found that three highly similar members, APUM-I, APUM-2 and APUM-3 (~90% identity) and co-localize spatially and temporally in the shoot apical and axillaries meristems, root elongation zone and pericycle during callus and lateral root formation, as well as stamens and pollens. RTPCR assays showed that these proteins have similar expression profiles in ali organs analyzed. Moreover, plant apum-1 and apum-2 knockouts have no detectably altered phenotype, suggesting a functional redundancy between them. Plants in which APUM-I, APUM-2 and APUM-3 expression were reduced through antisense RNA, showed chlorotic and reduced leaves, shorter and less ramificated roots and low fertility. This phenotype is similar to that of plants over-expressing the KRP-2 gene, a CDK inhibitor. An AraPum binding element at 3\'-UTR of the KRP-2 transcript suggests that it may be a possible target for APUM. In addition, in comparison to wild-type plants, antisense plants have increased KRP-2 transcripts levels. We proposed that APUM proteins act by coordinating leaf and root formation by way of influencing KRP-2 transiation. The ancestral function of PUF proteins in the maintenance of the cell cycle, to detriment of differentiation, seems to be conserved in plants.
20

Macromolecular Matchmaking : Mechanisms and Biology of Bacterial Small RNAs

Holmqvist, Erik January 2012 (has links)
Cells sense the properties of the surrounding environment and convert this information into changes in gene expression. Bacteria are, in contrast to many multi-cellular eukaryotes, remarkable in their ability to cope with rapid environmental changes and to endure harsh and extreme milieus. Previously, control of gene expression was thought to be carried out exclusively by proteins. However, it is now clear that small regulatory RNAs (sRNA) also carry out gene regulatory functions. Bacteria such as E. coli harbor a large class of sRNAs that bind to mRNAs to alter translation and/or mRNA stability. By identifying mRNAs that are targeted by sRNAs, my studies have broadened the understanding of the mechanisms that underlie sRNA-dependent gene regulation, and have shed light on the impact that this type of regulation has on bacterial physiology. Control of gene expression often relies on the interplay of many regulators. This interplay is exemplified by our discovery of mutual regulation between the sRNA MicF and the globally acting transcription factor Lrp. Through double negative feedback, these two regulators respond to nutrient availability in the environment which results in reprogramming of downstream gene expression. We have also shown that both the transcription factor CsgD, and the anti-sigma factor FlgM, are repressed by the two sRNAs OmrA and OmrB, suggesting that these sRNAs are important players in the complex regulation that allow bacteria to switch between motility and sessility. Bacterial populations of genetically identical individuals show phenotypic variations when switching to the sessile state due to bistability in gene expression. While bistability has previously been demonstrated to arise from stochastic fluctuations in transcription, our results suggest that bistability possibly may arise from sRNA-dependent regulatory events also on the post-transcriptional level.

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