• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 100
  • 19
  • 10
  • 4
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 151
  • 151
  • 141
  • 43
  • 34
  • 34
  • 27
  • 26
  • 25
  • 24
  • 21
  • 20
  • 19
  • 16
  • 15
  • 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.
131

Uso de RNA de interferência (siRNA) para modulação da expressão das moléculas co-estimuladoras CD80 e CD86 em células dendríticas. / Use of small interfering RNA (SIRNA) for modulating the expression of costimulatory molecules CD80 and CD86 on dendritic cells.

Migliori, Isabella Katz 08 December 2010 (has links)
As moléculas co-estimuladoras CD80 e CD86, expressas na superfície de células dendríticas (DCs), as principais células apresentadoras de antígenos profissionais (APCs), possuem participação fundamental na indução de resposta e manutenção de tolerância, motivo pelo qual são consideradas alvos terapêuticos promissores. Essas moléculas promovem o segundo sinal necessário à ativação e proliferação dos linfócitos T por meio da ligação ao receptor CD28, ou inibem a resposta por essas células por meio da ligação ao receptor CTLA-4, ambos expressos na superfície dos linfócitos. Muitos são os relatos da literatura indicando diferenças tanto quantitativas quanto qualitativas entre CD80 e CD86 na capacidade de ativação de linfócitos T, os mais relevantes apontando diferenças na capacidade de indução de diferenciação de linfócitos para os padrões Th1 e Th2 de secreção de citocinas. Porém, tais relatos são muitas vezes contraditórios, e o verdadeiro papel funcional dessas moléculas ainda está por ser estabelecido. Assim, propusemo-nos a estabelecer as metodologias necessárias para silenciar as moléculas CD80 e CD86 em células dendríticas (DCs) humanas, derivadas de monócitos do sangue periférico, por meio da tecnologia de RNA de interferência. Isso possibilitaria esclarecer o papel desempenhado por cada uma dessas moléculas na capacidade de ativação de linfócitos T. Para tanto, padronizou-se a transfecção reversa de DCs do quarto dia da cultura com siRNA fluorescente e os agentes de transfecção lipídicos siPORT e iMAX, tendo sido obtidas eficiências de transfecção de 64,7% ± 5,2 e 69,7% ± 14,5%, respectivamente. DCs do quarto dia de cultura foram transfectadas com siRNAs específicos para CD80, e o fenótipo avaliado após 48 horas da transfecção. Foi possível identificar, além do eficiente silenciamento de CD80 por dois dos três siRNAs testados, também uma diminuição, inesperada, de células CD86+. Para o silenciamento de CD86, células CD14+ selecionadas positivamente por beads magnéticas foram transfectadas com siRNAs específicos para CD86, ativadas após 24 horas da transfecção e o silenciamento avaliado após 24 horas da ativação. Embora o silenciamento conseguido por um dos dois siRNAs testados tenha sido muito pequeno, observou-se fenômeno equivalente, com diminuição de células CD80+. Embora inconclusivos, esses dados sugerem a possibilidade de modulação recíproca dessas moléculas. Assim, pudemos obter a transfecção eficiente de DCs com siRNAs de interesse e, através deles, modular a expressão de CD80 e CD86. Com estes instrumentos, portanto, podemos agora desenvolver estudos quanto ao papel de cada uma destas moléculas na fisiologia da apresentação antigênica pelas DCs. / The costimulatory molecules CD80 and CD86, expressed on surface of dendritic cells (DCs), are essential to trigger T cell activation and to maintain self tolerance, indicating that these molecules are promising therapeutic targets. They can either bind to CD28 on T cells, promoting T cell activation and leading to their proliferation and cytokine production, or to CTLA-4, which is expressed following T cell activation, and can inhibit T cell response. Though CD80 and CD86 are thought to provide equivalent T cell costimulation, a growing body of evidence suggests that there are different functional consequences of CD28 engagement by these two molecules. Many reports point to variations in their ability to stimulate different lymphocyte subsets. However, there is still controversy in the literature and the actual role of CD80 and CD86 remains to be elucidated. Therefore, the aim of this study was to establish the methodology necessary to silence, by small interfering RNAs (siRNAs), both CD80 and CD86 expression on monocyte-derived dendritic cells. These findings would be the base of studys that could better elucidate the function of these two coestimulatory molecules in T cell activation. Therefore, transfection of 4th day DCs with fluorescent siRNA and lipidic transfection agents siPORT and iMAX was established, an d transfection efficiency observed was 64,7% ± 5,2 e 69,7% ± 14,5%, respectively. 4th day DCs were transfected with specific CD80 siRNAs and phenotype was observed after 48 hours of transfection. Besides CD80 efficient silencing by two from three siRNAs tested, there was an unexpected decrease in CD86+ cells. To establish CD86 silencing, CD14+ cells were positively selected with magnetic beads and immediately transfected with CD86 specific siRNAs, activated after 24 hours of transfection, and phenotype was observed after 24 hours of activation. Despite the fact that silencing conferred by one of two siRNAs was very low, equivalent phenomenon was observed, with a decrease in CD80+ cells. Although the observed effects were inconclusive, these data suggests a possible reciprocal modulation by these two molecules. Therefore, we were able to obtain efficient DC transfection with siRNAs of interest, as well as modulate CD80 and CD86 expression. With these instruments we can now develop studies regarding the real physiological role of these two costimulatory molecules in DCs antigen presentation.
132

Design of vector for the expression of shRNA in transgenic animals

Sawafta, Ashraf 23 May 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Les petits ARN interférents (siRNA) sont encore rarement utilisés chez les vertébrés transgéniques pour inhiber l'expression de gènes. En effet, les vecteurs contenant un promoteur de type ARN polymérase III comme ceux des gènes U6 et H1 qui permettent une expression élevée des gènes codant pour des ARNi dans des cellules sont souvent silencieux in vivo. Dans cette thèse, divers vecteurs exprimant des petits ARN double brins (shRNA) ont été testés dans des cellules en culture et chez des souris transgéniques pour inhiber l'ARN m du gène précoce IE du virus de la pseudo rage porcine responsable de la maladie d'Aujeszky. La quantité et la séquence des si RNA produits ont été étudiées par qPCR. Dans des cellules CHO transfectées pour une expression transitoire, les vecteurs contenant les gènes U6-shRNA ont été de loin les plus efficaces pour inhiber le gène IE en raison du niveau élevé de siRNA produit. Par ailleurs, deux constructions contenant le promoteur de type ARN polymérase II, le promoteur du gène eF1-α etune séquence de shRNA bordée par 5T ou introduite dans un gène de microARN (miRNA) le miR30 ont permis d'obtenir une inhibition significative mais limitée de l'ARNm du gène IE. Ceci parait être du au niveau relativement faible de siRNA produit. Le siRNA produit par le gène du miRNA s'est avéré aussi efficace que ceux obtenus à partir des constructions U6-shRNA bien que ces derniers soient un peu plus longs. Ces diverses constructions ont été utilisées pour obtenir des souris transgéniques. Des souris contenant la séquence du shRNA n'ont pu être obtenues qu'à partir de la construction miRNA. Ceci peut être du au fait que les siRNA produits par les autres constructions ont exercé un effet inhibiteur sur des cibles aspécifiques (off-targeting) qui ne s'est pas produit avec le siRNA provenant de la construction miRNA car il contient quelques nucléotides en moins. Les souris transgéniques contenant la construction miRNA ont été soumises à une infection par le virus de la pseudo rage porcine. Bien que les souris exprimaient le gène shRNA qu'à un faible niveau. Quelques souris transgéniques ont résisté à l'infection. La seconde partie de la thèse a consisté à sélectionner d'autres séquences de shRNA capables d'inhiber l'expression du gène IE sans exercer des effets aspécifiques. Deux séquences de shRNA ont permis une telle inhibition. L'une est dirigée contre la région 5'UTR du gène IE et l'autre contre la région 3'UTR. Ces données suggèrent que (1) l'efficacité d'un shRNA n'est pas déterminée par sa séquence d'une manière totalement prévisible (2) l'efficacité d'un siRNA est d'autant plus élevé que sa séquence cible dans l'ARNm est en structure double brin (3) un effet inhibiteur intense et optimum peut être obtenu avec des concentrations faibles d'un siRNA (4) les effets secondaires et en particulier le off-targeting peuvent avoir lieu à faible concentration du siRNA mais ils ont d'autant plus de chance de se produire que la concentration du si RNA est plus élevée (5) un siRNA destiné à être utilisé chez des animaux transgéniques devrait être choisi pour sa capacité à inhiber efficacement un gène à faible concentration pour réduire ses effets secondaires.
133

Imbalance of SMC1 and SMC3 Cohesins Causes Specific and Distinct Effects

Laugsch, Magdalena, Seebach, Jochen, Schnittler, Hans, Jessberger, Rolf 22 January 2014 (has links) (PDF)
SMC1 and SMC3 form a high-affinity heterodimer, which provides an open backbone of the cohesin ring, to be closed by a kleisin protein. RNAi mediated knock-down of either one heterodimer partner, SMC1 or SMC3, is expected to cause very similar if not identical phenotypes. However, we observed highly distinct, protein-specific phenotypes. Upon knock-down of human SMC1, much of SMC3 remains stable, accumulates in the cytoplasm and does not associate with other cohesin proteins. Most of the excess nuclear SMC3 is highly mobile and not or only weakly chromosome-associated. In contrast, human SMC3 knock-down rendered SMC1 instable without cytoplasmic accumulation. As observed by differential protein extraction and in FRAP experiments the remaining SMC1 or SMC3 proteins in the respective SMC1 or SMC3 knock-down experiments constituted a cohesin pool, which is associated with chromatin with highest affinity, likely the least expendable. Expression of bovine EGFP-SMC1 or mouse EGFP-SMC3 in human cells under conditions of human SMC1 or SMC3 knock-down rescued the respective phenotypes, but in untreated cells over-expressed exogenous SMC proteins mis-localized. Paucity of either one of the SMC proteins causes RAD21 degradation. These results argue for great caution in interpreting SMC1 and SMC3 RNAi or over-expression experiments. Under challenged conditions these two proteins unexpectedly behave differently, which may have biological consequences for regulation of cohesin-associated functions and for human cohesin pathologies.
134

Uso de RNA de interferência (siRNA) para modulação da expressão das moléculas co-estimuladoras CD80 e CD86 em células dendríticas. / Use of small interfering RNA (SIRNA) for modulating the expression of costimulatory molecules CD80 and CD86 on dendritic cells.

Isabella Katz Migliori 08 December 2010 (has links)
As moléculas co-estimuladoras CD80 e CD86, expressas na superfície de células dendríticas (DCs), as principais células apresentadoras de antígenos profissionais (APCs), possuem participação fundamental na indução de resposta e manutenção de tolerância, motivo pelo qual são consideradas alvos terapêuticos promissores. Essas moléculas promovem o segundo sinal necessário à ativação e proliferação dos linfócitos T por meio da ligação ao receptor CD28, ou inibem a resposta por essas células por meio da ligação ao receptor CTLA-4, ambos expressos na superfície dos linfócitos. Muitos são os relatos da literatura indicando diferenças tanto quantitativas quanto qualitativas entre CD80 e CD86 na capacidade de ativação de linfócitos T, os mais relevantes apontando diferenças na capacidade de indução de diferenciação de linfócitos para os padrões Th1 e Th2 de secreção de citocinas. Porém, tais relatos são muitas vezes contraditórios, e o verdadeiro papel funcional dessas moléculas ainda está por ser estabelecido. Assim, propusemo-nos a estabelecer as metodologias necessárias para silenciar as moléculas CD80 e CD86 em células dendríticas (DCs) humanas, derivadas de monócitos do sangue periférico, por meio da tecnologia de RNA de interferência. Isso possibilitaria esclarecer o papel desempenhado por cada uma dessas moléculas na capacidade de ativação de linfócitos T. Para tanto, padronizou-se a transfecção reversa de DCs do quarto dia da cultura com siRNA fluorescente e os agentes de transfecção lipídicos siPORT e iMAX, tendo sido obtidas eficiências de transfecção de 64,7% ± 5,2 e 69,7% ± 14,5%, respectivamente. DCs do quarto dia de cultura foram transfectadas com siRNAs específicos para CD80, e o fenótipo avaliado após 48 horas da transfecção. Foi possível identificar, além do eficiente silenciamento de CD80 por dois dos três siRNAs testados, também uma diminuição, inesperada, de células CD86+. Para o silenciamento de CD86, células CD14+ selecionadas positivamente por beads magnéticas foram transfectadas com siRNAs específicos para CD86, ativadas após 24 horas da transfecção e o silenciamento avaliado após 24 horas da ativação. Embora o silenciamento conseguido por um dos dois siRNAs testados tenha sido muito pequeno, observou-se fenômeno equivalente, com diminuição de células CD80+. Embora inconclusivos, esses dados sugerem a possibilidade de modulação recíproca dessas moléculas. Assim, pudemos obter a transfecção eficiente de DCs com siRNAs de interesse e, através deles, modular a expressão de CD80 e CD86. Com estes instrumentos, portanto, podemos agora desenvolver estudos quanto ao papel de cada uma destas moléculas na fisiologia da apresentação antigênica pelas DCs. / The costimulatory molecules CD80 and CD86, expressed on surface of dendritic cells (DCs), are essential to trigger T cell activation and to maintain self tolerance, indicating that these molecules are promising therapeutic targets. They can either bind to CD28 on T cells, promoting T cell activation and leading to their proliferation and cytokine production, or to CTLA-4, which is expressed following T cell activation, and can inhibit T cell response. Though CD80 and CD86 are thought to provide equivalent T cell costimulation, a growing body of evidence suggests that there are different functional consequences of CD28 engagement by these two molecules. Many reports point to variations in their ability to stimulate different lymphocyte subsets. However, there is still controversy in the literature and the actual role of CD80 and CD86 remains to be elucidated. Therefore, the aim of this study was to establish the methodology necessary to silence, by small interfering RNAs (siRNAs), both CD80 and CD86 expression on monocyte-derived dendritic cells. These findings would be the base of studys that could better elucidate the function of these two coestimulatory molecules in T cell activation. Therefore, transfection of 4th day DCs with fluorescent siRNA and lipidic transfection agents siPORT and iMAX was established, an d transfection efficiency observed was 64,7% ± 5,2 e 69,7% ± 14,5%, respectively. 4th day DCs were transfected with specific CD80 siRNAs and phenotype was observed after 48 hours of transfection. Besides CD80 efficient silencing by two from three siRNAs tested, there was an unexpected decrease in CD86+ cells. To establish CD86 silencing, CD14+ cells were positively selected with magnetic beads and immediately transfected with CD86 specific siRNAs, activated after 24 hours of transfection, and phenotype was observed after 24 hours of activation. Despite the fact that silencing conferred by one of two siRNAs was very low, equivalent phenomenon was observed, with a decrease in CD80+ cells. Although the observed effects were inconclusive, these data suggests a possible reciprocal modulation by these two molecules. Therefore, we were able to obtain efficient DC transfection with siRNAs of interest, as well as modulate CD80 and CD86 expression. With these instruments we can now develop studies regarding the real physiological role of these two costimulatory molecules in DCs antigen presentation.
135

Imbalance of SMC1 and SMC3 Cohesins Causes Specific and Distinct Effects

Laugsch, Magdalena, Seebach, Jochen, Schnittler, Hans, Jessberger, Rolf 22 January 2014 (has links)
SMC1 and SMC3 form a high-affinity heterodimer, which provides an open backbone of the cohesin ring, to be closed by a kleisin protein. RNAi mediated knock-down of either one heterodimer partner, SMC1 or SMC3, is expected to cause very similar if not identical phenotypes. However, we observed highly distinct, protein-specific phenotypes. Upon knock-down of human SMC1, much of SMC3 remains stable, accumulates in the cytoplasm and does not associate with other cohesin proteins. Most of the excess nuclear SMC3 is highly mobile and not or only weakly chromosome-associated. In contrast, human SMC3 knock-down rendered SMC1 instable without cytoplasmic accumulation. As observed by differential protein extraction and in FRAP experiments the remaining SMC1 or SMC3 proteins in the respective SMC1 or SMC3 knock-down experiments constituted a cohesin pool, which is associated with chromatin with highest affinity, likely the least expendable. Expression of bovine EGFP-SMC1 or mouse EGFP-SMC3 in human cells under conditions of human SMC1 or SMC3 knock-down rescued the respective phenotypes, but in untreated cells over-expressed exogenous SMC proteins mis-localized. Paucity of either one of the SMC proteins causes RAD21 degradation. These results argue for great caution in interpreting SMC1 and SMC3 RNAi or over-expression experiments. Under challenged conditions these two proteins unexpectedly behave differently, which may have biological consequences for regulation of cohesin-associated functions and for human cohesin pathologies.
136

Evolutionary Approaches to the Study of Small Noncoding Regulatory RNA Pathways: A Dissertation

Simkin, Alfred T. 17 July 2014 (has links)
Short noncoding RNAs play roles in regulating nearly every biological process, in nearly every organism, yet the exact function and importance of these molecules remains a subject of some debate. In order to gain a better understanding of the contexts in which these regulators have evolved, I have undertaken a variety of approaches to study the evolutionary history of the components that make up these pathways, in the form of two main research efforts. In the first chapter, I have used a combination of population genetics and molecular evolution techniques to show that proteins involved in the piRNA pathway are rapidly evolving, and that different components of the pathway seem to be evolving rapidly on different timescales. These rapidly evolving piRNA pathway proteins can be loosely separated into two groups. The first group appears to evolve quickly at the species level, perhaps in response to transposons that invade across species lines, while the second group appears to evolve quickly at the level of individual populations, perhaps in response to transposons that are paternally present yet novel to the maternal genome. In the second chapter of my research, I have used molecular evolution techniques and carefully devised controls to show that the binding sites of well-conserved miRNAs are among the most slowly changing short motifs in the genome, consistent with a conserved function for these short RNAs in regulatory pathways that are ancient and extremely slow to change. I have additionally discovered a major flaw in an existing approach to motif turnover calculations, which may lead to systematic biases in the published literature toward the false inference of increased regulatory complexity over time. I have implemented a revised approach to motif turnover that addresses this flaw.
137

Putting the Pieces Together: Exons and piRNAs: A Dissertation

Roy, Christian K. 21 May 2014 (has links)
Analysis of gene expression has undergone a technological revolution. What was impossible 6 years ago is now routine. High-throughput DNA sequencing machines capable of generating hundreds of millions of reads allow, indeed force, a major revision toward the study of the genome’s functional output—the transcriptome. This thesis examines the history of DNA sequencing, measurement of gene expression by sequencing, isoform complexity driven by alternative splicing and mammalian piRNA precursor biogenesis. Examination of these topics is framed around development of a novel RNA-templated DNA-DNA ligation assay (SeqZip) that allows for efficient analysis of abundant, complex, and functional long RNAs. The discussion focuses on the future of transcriptome analysis, development and applications of SeqZip, and challenges presented to biomedical researchers by extremely large and rich datasets.
138

A Novel Role of UAP56 in piRNA Mediated Transposon Silencing: A Dissertation

Zhang, Fan 02 August 2013 (has links)
Transposon silencing is required to maintain genome stability. The non-coding piRNAs effectively suppress of transposon activity during germline development. In the Drosophila female germline, long precursors of piRNAs are transcribed from discrete heterochromatic clusters and then processed into primary piRNAs in the perinuclear nuage. However, the detailed mechanism of piRNA biogenesis, specifically how the nuclear and cytoplasmic processes are connected, is not well understood. The nuclear DEAD box protein UAP56 has been previously implicated in protein-coding gene transcript splicing and export. I have identified a novel function of UAP56 in piRNA biogenesis. In Drosophila egg chambers, UAP56 co-localizes with the cluster-associated HP1 variant Rhino. Nuage is a germline-specific perinuclear structure rich in piRNA biogenesis proteins, including Vasa, a DEAD box with an established role in piRNA production. Vasa-containing nuage granules localize directly across the nuclear envelope from cluster foci containing UAP56 and Rhino, and cluster transcripts immunoprecipitate with both Vasa and UAP56. Significantly, a charge-substitution mutation that alters a conserved surface residue in UAP56 disrupts co-localization with Rhino, germline piRNA production, transposon silencing, and perinuclear localization of Vasa. I therefore propose that UAP56 and Vasa function in a piRNA-processing compartment that spans the nuclear envelope.
139

Using Experimental and Computational Strategies to Understand the Biogenesis of microRNAs and piRNAs: A Dissertation

Han, Bo W. 24 July 2015 (has links)
Small RNAs are single-stranded, 18–36 nucleotide RNAs that can be categorized as miRNA, siRNA, and piRNA. miRNA are expressed ubiquitously in tissues and at particular developmental stages. They fine-tune gene expression by regulating the stability and translation of mRNAs. piRNAs are mainly expressed in the animal gonads and their major function is repressing transposable elements to ensure the faithful transfer of genetic information from generation to generation. My thesis research focused on the biogenesis of miRNAs and piRNAs using both experimental and computational strategies. The biogenesis of miRNAs involves sequential processing of their precursors by the RNase III enzymes Drosha and Dicer to generate miRNA/miRNA* duplexes, which are subsequently loaded into Argonaute proteins to form the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC). We discovered that, after assembled into Ago1, more than a quarter of Drosophila miRNAs undergo 3′ end trimming by the 3′-to-5′ exoribonuclease Nibbler. Such trimming occurs after removal of the miRNA* strand from pre-RISC and may be the final step in RISC assembly, ultimately enhancing target messenger RNA repression. Moreover, by developing a specialized Burrow-Wheeler Transform based short reads aligner, we discovered that in the absence of Nibbler a subgroup of miRNAs undergoes increased tailing—non-templated nucleotide addition to their 3′ ends, which are usually associated with miRNA degradation. Therefore, the 3′ trimming by Nibbler might increase miRNA stability by protecting them from degradation. In Drosophila germ line, piRNAs associate with three PIWI-clade Argonaute proteins, Piwi, Aub, and Ago3. piRNAs bound by Aub and Ago3 are generated by reciprocal cleavages of sense and antisense transposon transcripts (a.k.a., the “Ping-Pong” cycle), which amplifies piRNA abundance and degrades transposon transcripts in the cytoplasm. On the other hand, Piwi and its associated piRNA repress the transcription of transposons in the nucleus. We discovered that Aub- and Ago3-mediated transposon RNA cleavage not only generates piRNAs bound to each other, but also produces substrates for the endonuclease Zucchini, which processively cleaves those substrates in a periodicity of ~26 nt and generates piRNAs that predominantly load into Piwi. Without Aub or Ago3, the abundance of Piwi-bound piRNAs drops and transcriptional silencing is compromised. Our discovery revises the current model of piRNA biogenesis.
140

Unveiling Molecular Mechanisms of piRNA Pathway from Small Signals in Big Data: A Dissertation

Wang, Wei 01 October 2015 (has links)
PIWI-interacting RNAs (piRNA) are a group of 23–35 nucleotide (nt) short RNAs that protect animal gonads from transposon activities. In Drosophila germ line, piRNAs can be categorized into two different categories— primary and secondary piRNAs— based on their origins. Primary piRNAs, generated from transcripts of specific genomic regions called piRNA clusters, which are enriched in transposon fragments that are unlikely to retain transposition activity. The transcription and maturation of primary piRNAs from those cluster transcripts are poorly understood. After being produced, a group of primary piRNAs associates Piwi proteins and directs them to repress transposons at the transcriptional level in the nucleus. Other than their direct role in repressing transposons, primary piRNAs can also initiate the production of secondary piRNA. piRNAs with such function are loaded in a second PIWI protein named Aubergine (Aub). Similar to Piwi, Aub is guided by piRNAs to identify its targets through base-pairing. Differently, Aub functions in the cytoplasm by cleaving transposon mRNAs. The 5' cleavage products are not degraded but loaded into the third PIWI protein Argonaute3 (Ago3). It is believed that an unidentified nuclease trims the 3' ends of those cleavage products to 23–29 nt, becoming mature piRNAs remained in Ago3. Such piRNAs whose 5' ends are generated by another PIWI protein are named secondary piRNAs. Intriguingly, secondary piRNAs loaded into Ago3 also cleave transposon mRNA or piRNA cluster transcripts and produce more secondary piRNAs loaded into Aub. This reciprocal feed-forward loop, named the “Ping-Pong cycle”, amplified piRNA abundance. By dissecting and analyzing data from large-scale deep sequencing of piRNAs and transposon transcripts, my dissertation research elucidates the biogenesis of germline piRNAs in Drosophila. How primary piRNAs are processed into mature piRNAs remains enigmatic. I discover that primary piRNA signal on the genome display a fixed periodicity of ~26 nt. Such phasing depends on Zucchini, Armitage and some other primary piRNA pathway components. Further analysis suggests that secondary piRNAs bound to Ago3 can initiate phased primary piRNA production from cleaved transposon RNAs. The first ~26 nt becomes a secondary piRNA that bind Aub while the subsequent piRNAs bind Piwi, allowing piRNAs to spread beyond the site of RNA cleavage. This discovery adds sequence diversity to the piRNA pool, allowing adaptation to changes in transposon sequence. We further find that most Piwi-associated piRNAs are generated from the cleavage products of Ago3, instead of being processed from piRNA cluster transcripts as the previous model suggests. The cardinal function of Ago3 is to produce antisense piRNAs that direct transcriptional silencing by Piwi, rather to make piRNAs that guide post-transcriptional silencing by Aub. Although Ago3 slicing is required to efficiently trigger phased piRNA production, an alternative, slicing-independent pathway suffices to generate Piwi-bound piRNAs that repress transcription of a subset of transposon families. The alternative pathway may help flies silence newly acquired transposons for which they lack extensively complementary piRNAs. The Ping-Pong model depicts that first ten nucleotides of Aub-bound piRNAs are complementary to the first ten nt of Ago3-bound piRNAs. Supporting this view, piRNAs bound to Aub typically begin with Uridine (1U), while piRNAs bound to Ago3 often have adenine at position 10 (10A). Furthermore, the majority of Ping-Pong piRNAs form this 1U:10A pair. The Ping-Pong model proposes that the 10A is a consequence of 1U. By statistically quantifying those target piRNAs not paired to g1U, we discover that 10A is not directly caused by 1U. Instead, fly Aub as well as its homologs, Siwi in silkmoth and MILI in mice, have an intrinsic preference for adenine at the t1 position of their target RNAs. On the other hand, this t1A (and g10A after loading) piRNA directly give rise to 1U piRNA in the next Ping-Pong cycle, maximizing the affinity between piRNAs and PIWI proteins.

Page generated in 0.1217 seconds