Spelling suggestions: "subject:"transcriptional""
1 |
Posttranscriptional Gene Regulation: From Global Models to Functional MechanismsThompson, Marshall Aaron January 2014 (has links)
<p>Precise regulation of the complex process of gene expression is essential for all aspects of life, and a large degree of this precision is mediated at the posttranscriptional level. The global and individual mechanisms by which posttranscriptional control is coordinated to maintain or alter levels of gene expression as necessary are not fully understood. Identification of the mRNA target sets of individual RNA binding proteins (RBPs) and characterization of the mechanisms by which RBPs regulate the expression of individual mRNAs provide some insight into the global structure of the posttranscriptional environment. However, few studies have integrated these findings into a global model of posttranscriptional control. We have explored the structure and function of the posttranscriptional regulatory system through a combination of global modeling approaches, global studies of mRNA translation and decay, and mechanistic studies of the function of individual RBPs, specifically HuR and Pum1. </p><p>By combining RBP-mRNA association data and transcription factor (TF) target data from separate global studies in yeast, we developed an integrated model of gene expression regulation. Evaluation of this model indicates that posttranscriptional regulation may be responsible for substantially greater contributions to the overall gene expression program than transcriptional regulation. Further, we identified a self-regulatory feature of the posttranscriptional network that suggests a `regulators of regulators' structure may be a defining feature of the posttranscriptional control of gene expression.</p><p>Additionally, we explored the mechanisms and functional consequences of the dynamic association between an RBP, HuR, and its target RNAs through a combination of modeling and experimental approaches, including polysome profile analysis and global measurement of RNA stability. Our model indicates that changes in total mRNA abundance are insufficient to fully explain the dynamics of association between HuR and its targets, suggesting a role for competition and cooperation with other RBPs. Our findings also indicate that HuR may play a role in inhibition of translation in a dynamic immunological system (T cell activation). </p><p>Finally, we performed a mechanistic analysis of the function of the Pum1 RBP and characterized the role of this protein in the translational regulation of several important target mRNAs through the use of luciferase reporter assays. We also provided the first in vivo evidence of a role for specific regions of the Pum1 protein in the mediation of gene expression. However, we were unable to verify previous in vitro reports of a role for Pum1 in the control of translation elongation of verified in vivo mRNA targets, suggesting that Pum1's regulatory function may be context dependent.</p><p>Ultimately, the approaches and findings in this study will provide a framework for the development of a global integrated model of posttranscriptional control. Through the iterative development of models and experimentation, hypotheses can be generated and, tested in the laboratory, and the results of these experiments will then further improve the development of the models. An integrated approach of this type will be necessary to fully understand the highly complex and interconnected nature of the gene expression regulatory system.</p> / Dissertation
|
2 |
Pulmonary Regnase-1 orchestrates the interplay of epithelium and adaptive immune systems to protect against pneumonia / 肺におけるRegnase-1は上皮細胞と獲得免疫細胞との相互作用を制御することにより呼吸器細菌感染防御に寄与するNakatsuka, Yoshinari 26 November 2018 (has links)
京都大学 / 0048 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(医学) / 甲第21413号 / 医博第4403号 / 京都大学大学院医学研究科医学専攻 / (主査)教授 生田 宏一, 教授 伊達 洋至, 教授 中川 一路 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Medical Science / Kyoto University / DFAM
|
3 |
Rapid Characterization of Posttranscriptional Modifications in RNA Using Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization Mass Spectrometry and Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization Post Source Decay Mass SpectrometryBerhane, Beniam T. 14 May 2003 (has links)
No description available.
|
4 |
Characterizing Modified Nucleosides in RNA by LC/UV/MSRussell, Susan P. January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
|
5 |
Identification and Characterization of New and Distinct Functional Roles of Posttranscriptional Control Elements in Cytoplasmic Expression of Retroviral RNAHull, Stacey Lynn 20 December 2002 (has links)
No description available.
|
6 |
Posttranscriptional Regulation of Embryonic Neurogenesis by the Exon Junction ComplexMao, Hanqian January 2016 (has links)
<p>The six-layered neuron structure in the cerebral cortex is the foundation for human mental abilities. In the developing cerebral cortex, neural stem cells undergo proliferation and differentiate into intermediate progenitors and neurons, a process known as embryonic neurogenesis. Disrupted embryonic neurogenesis is the root cause of a wide range of neurodevelopmental disorders, including microcephaly and intellectual disabilities. Multiple layers of regulatory networks have been identified and extensively studied over the past decades to understand this complex but extremely crucial process of brain development. In recent years, post-transcriptional RNA regulation through RNA binding proteins has emerged as a critical regulatory nexus in embryonic neurogenesis. The exon junction complex (EJC) is a highly conserved RNA binding complex composed of four core proteins, Magoh, Rbm8a, Eif4a3, and Casc3. The EJC plays a major role in regulating RNA splicing, nuclear export, subcellular localization, translation, and nonsense mediated RNA decay. Human genetic studies have associated individual EJC components with various developmental disorders. We showed previously that haploinsufficiency of Magoh causes microcephaly and disrupted neural stem cell differentiation in mouse. However, it is unclear if other EJC core components are also required for embryonic neurogenesis. More importantly, the molecular mechanism through which the EJC regulates embryonic neurogenesis remains largely unknown. Here, we demonstrated with genetically modified mouse models that both Rbm8a and Eif4a3 are required for proper embryonic neurogenesis and the formation of a normal brain. Using transcriptome and proteomic analysis, we showed that the EJC posttranscriptionally regulates genes involved in the p53 pathway, splicing and translation regulation, as well as ribosomal biogenesis. This is the first in vivo evidence suggesting that the etiology of EJC associated neurodevelopmental diseases can be ribosomopathies. We also showed that, different from other EJC core components, depletion of Casc3 only led to mild neurogenesis defects in the mouse model. However, our data suggested that Casc3 is required for embryo viability, development progression, and is potentially a regulator of cardiac development. Together, data presented in this thesis suggests that the EJC is crucial for embryonic neurogenesis and that the EJC and its peripheral factors may regulate development in a tissue-specific manner.</p> / Dissertation
|
7 |
RNA Recognition and Regulation of the AU-rich RNA Binding Proteins: HuR, TTP and BRF1Friedersdorf, Matthew Burk January 2011 (has links)
<p>Posttranscriptional gene expression is controlled and coordinated by RNA binding proteins (RBPs), many of which recognize specific RNAs through cis-regulatory RNA elements. One of the most highly studied classes of cis-regulatory RNA elements is the AU-rich elements (AREs). AREs are bound by a class of RBPs called ARE binding proteins (ARE-BPs), of which there are over a dozen in humans including HuR, tristetraprolin (TTP) and butyrate response factors 1 and 2 (BRF1 and BRF2). TTP, BRF1 and BRF2 belong to a family of tandem C3H zinc finger proteins that destabilize ARE-containing mRNAs. HuR acts to enhance the stability and translation of ARE-containing mRNAs, a function that is rare among ARE-BPs. While each of these ARE-BPs regulates the expression of ARE-containing mRNAs, some ARE-BPs themselves are also encoded by ARE-containing mRNAs, raising the possibility that each of these ARE-BPs may regulate one another's expression. In order to determine how these ARE-BPs influence each others expression and how this affects the regulation of global gene expression programs we have focused on three different aspects of these ARE-BP networks: control, response to stimuli, and global effects.</p><p>To address of network control of ARE-BPs we have focused on how HuR regulates a network of mRNAs including TTP, BRF1 and HuR's own mRNA. We demonstrate that HuR can bind to TTP's, BRF1's and its own mRNA. Furthermore, by employing overexpression and siRNA knockdown approaches we demonstrate that these mRNAs and their corresponding 3'UTR luciferase reporters are resilient to fluctuations in HuR levels and that the degree of this resiliency is cell type and condition specific.</p><p>To address the temporal responses within an ARE-BP network we focused on how each of the members of the TTP family of ARE-BPs reacts following the induction of the other family members by using epidermal growth factor (EGF) stimulation. Here we show that induction of TTP family member mRNAs during EGF stimulation is partially attributable to changes in mRNA stability. Furthermore, we also show that TTP and BRF1 are able to bind each of the TTP family member mRNAs and subsequently affect their expression by altering their mRNA degradation rates. In addition, we demonstrate that the unique temporal induction patterns of the TTP family member RBPs is correlated with the EGF stimulated induction of TTP-bound mRNAs, suggesting that a network comprised of TTP family members is able to influence the timing of complex gene expression patterns. </p><p>Finally, to address the influence of these networks on regulation of global gene expression programs we have focused on how HuR recognizes AREs and whether it can globally recognize multiple classes of ARE-containing mRNAs, including the canonical class of AREs recognized by the TTP family members. To investigate how the three RNA recognition motifs (RRMs) of HuR contribute to ARE recognition we generated a series of RRM point mutants and test their ability to disrupt RNA recognition of each of the RRMs. To identify different classes of ARE-containing mRNAs we examined these mutants with a global RNA binding site detection method called photoactivatable ribonucleoside crosslinking immunoprecipitation (PAR-CLIP). Together these techniques suggest that the RRMs of HuR cooperate to recognize mRNA targets and that HuR's ability to bind RNA is coupled to the cellular distribution of HuR, and thus, are important in its role for regulating expression of bound mRNAs. </p><p>Together these studies indicate that ARE-BP posttranscriptional networks are highly interconnected and display complex regulatory interactions depending on cell type and stimuli. Furthermore, these networks can create complex behaviors such as timing of expression events or resiliency to fluctuations in protein levels. Finally, the components of these ARE-BP networks target partially overlapping sets of mRNAs to impact global gene expression patterns that ultimately coordinate the cellular responses to external stimuli.</p> / Dissertation
|
8 |
Regulace genové exprese na posttranskripčních úrovních. / Regulation of gene expression at posttranscriptional levels.Kollárová, Johana January 2018 (has links)
Regulation of gene expression in response to cellular and organismal needs is essential for sustaining organisms' survival and successful competition in the evolution of life forms. This regulation is executed at multiple levels starting with regulation of gene transcription, followed by regulation at multiple posttranscriptional levels. In this thesis, I focused on posttranscriptional mechanisms that contribute to gene expression regulation in the model organism Caenorhabditis elegans which enables powerful genetic and genomic techniques and allows the visualization of experimental genetic manipulations in toto, on the level of the complete organism during its life span. For this, we analysed the function of the orthologue of mammalian transcriptional corepressor NCOR, GEI-8. We used a functionally defective mutant gei-8(ok1671). I analysed the whole genome expression of homozygous gei- 8(ok1671) mutant and its link with observed mutant phenotype that includes defective gonad development and sterility and performed experiments leading to the proposition that disbalances in 21-U RNAs of piRNA class present in the most derepressed gene, the predicted mitochondrial sulfide:quinine reductase encoded by Y9C9A.16, are associated with the gonadal phenotype. In the second part of the thesis, I focused on...
|
9 |
Multigene Metabolic Engineering Via The Chloroplast GenomeRuiz, Oscar Nemesio 01 January 2004 (has links)
The vast majority of valuable agronomic traits are encoded polygenetically. Chloroplast genetic engineering offers an alternate approach to multigene engineering by allowing the insertion of entire pathways in a single transformation event, while being an environmentally friendly approach. Stable integration into the chloroplast genome and transcription of the phaA gene coding for β-ketothiolase was confirmed by Southern and northern blots. Coomassie-stained gel and western blots confirmed hyperexpression of β-ketothiolase in leaves and anthers, with high enzyme activity. The transgenic lines were normal except for the male sterile phenotype, lacking pollen. Scanning electron microscopy revealed a collapsed morphology of the pollen grains. Transgenic lines followed an accelerated anther developmental pattern, affecting their development and maturation, resulting in aberrant tissue patterns. Abnormal thickening of the outer wall, enlarged endothecium and vacuolation, decreased the inner space of the locules, affecting pollen grain and resulted in the irregular shape and collapsed phenotype. Reversibility of the male sterility phenotype was achieved by exposing the plants to continuous illumination, producing viable pollen and copious amounts of seeds. This is the first report of engineered cytoplasmic male sterility and offers a new tool for transgene containment for both nuclear and organelle genomes. Detailed characterization of transcriptional, posttranscriptional and translational processes of heterologous operons expressed via the chloroplast genome is reported here. Northern blot analyses performed on chloroplast transgenic lines harboring seven different heterologous operons, revealed that in most cases, only polycistronic mRNA was produced or polycistrons were the most abundant form and that they were not processed into monocistrons. Despite such lack of processing, abundant foreign protein accumulation was detected in these transgenic lines. Interestingly, a stable secondary structure formed from a heterologous bacterial intergenic sequence was recognized and efficiently processed, indicating that the chloroplast posttranscriptional machinery can indeed recognize sequences that are not of chloroplast origin, retaining its prokaryotic ancestral features. Processed and unprocessed heterologous polycistrons were quite stable even in the absence of 3'UTRs and were efficiently translated. Unlike native 5'UTRs, heterologous secondary structures or 5'UTRs showed efficient translational enhancement independent of any cellular control. Finally, we observed abundant read-through transcription in the presence of chloroplast 3'UTRs. Such read-through transcripts were efficiently processed at introns present within native operons. Addressing questions about polycistrons, as well as the sequences required for their processing and transcript stability are essential for future approaches in metabolic engineering. Finally, we have shown phytoremediation of mercury by engineering the mer operon via the chloroplast genome under the regulation of chloroplast native and heterologous 5'UTRs. These transgenenic plants hyperexpress were able to translate MerA and MerB enzymes to levels detectable by coomassie stained gel. The knowledge acquired from these studies offer guidelines for engineering multigene pathways via the chloroplast genome.
|
10 |
Characterization of C/EBPs in Mammary Epithelial Cell BiologyDearth, Lawrence 20 December 2002 (has links)
No description available.
|
Page generated in 0.1101 seconds