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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Characterization of the structure and function of a <I>Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron</I> 16S rRNA promoter

Thorson, Mary Leah 13 June 2003 (has links)
The bacteroides group is a subdivision in the <I>Cytophaga-Flavobacterium-Bacteroides</I> phylum. This group is as phylogenetically distinct from other Gram-negative enterics, including <I>Escherichia coli</I>, as they are from Gram-positive organisms. Furthermore, there is no cross expression between genes of <I>E. coli</I> and <I>Bacteroides</I> species. It is thought that this difference in gene expression lies in part at the level of transcription initiation and is due to the sequences within the promoter region itself. A putative consensus sequence for <I>Bacteroides</I> promoters has been published by C. Jeff Smith&#146;s research group based on alignments of the sequences upstream of certain regulated genes. However, this consensus has not been found within all putative <I>Bacteroides</I> promoters. In this study, the promoter structure and function of a strong housekeeping <I>B. thetaiotaomicron</I> 16S rRNA promoter was examined and compared to an <I>E. coli</I> 16S rRNA promoter. Our hypothesis is that there are significant differences between the promoters of these two organisms. Analysis of <I>B. thetaiotaomicron</I> sequence upstream of the 16S rRNA gene has revealed the same overall structure known for <I>E. coli</I> 16S rRNA promoters in that there are two putative promoters separated by approximately 150 bp. However, the <I>B. thetaiotaomicron</I> 16S rRNA promoter contains the proposed <I>Bacteroides</I> &#151;7 and &#151;33 consensus sequences instead of the well known <I>E. coli</I> &#151;10 and &#151;35 consensus sequences. The biological activity of the<I> B. thetaiotaomicron</I> 16S rRNA full-length promoter was confirmed using a <I>Bacteroides lux</I> reporter system. A newly designed <I>Bacteroides lux</I> reporter was used to analyze specific regions of the <I>B. thetaiotaomicron</I> 16S rRNA promoter. In addition, by pairing the <I>B. thetaiotaomicron</I> 16S rRNA promoter with an <I>E. coli</I> ribosomal binding site, and vice-versa, the improved <I>lux</I> reporter was used to further confirm that the difference in gene expression between the two species lies at the level of transcription in <I>E. coli</I>. In <I>Bacteroides</I>, however, transcription and translation may work together to create a barrier to efficient gene expression of foreign genes. </P> / Master of Science
2

Modelling Approaches to Molecular Systems Biology / Systembiologisk modellering på molekylär nivå

Fange, David January 2010 (has links)
Implementation and analysis of mathematical models can serve as a powerful tool in understanding how intracellular processes in bacteria affect the bacterial phenotype. In this thesis I have implemented and analysed models of a number of different parts of the bacterium E. coli in order to understand these types of connections. I have also developed new tools for analysis of stochastic reaction-diffusion models. Resistance mutations in the E. coli ribosomes make the bacteria less susceptible to treatment with the antibiotic drug erythromycin compared to bacteria carrying wildtype ribosomes. The effect is dependent on efficient drug efflux pumps. In the absence of pumps for erythromycin, there is no difference in growth between wildtype and drug target resistant bacteria. I present a model explaining this unexpected phenotype, and also give the conditions for its occurrence. Stochastic fluctuations in gene expression in bacteria, such as E. coli, result in stochastic fluctuations in biosynthesis pathways. I have characterised the effect of stochastic fluctuations in the parallel biosynthesis pathways of amino acids. I show how the average protein synthesis rate decreases with an increasing number of fluctuating amino acid production pathways. I further show how the cell can remedy this problem by using sensitive feedback control of transcription, and by optimising its expression levels of amino acid biosynthetic enzymes. The pole-to-pole oscillations of the Min-proteins in E. coli are required for accurate mid-cell division. The phenotype of the Min-oscillations is altered in three different mutants: filamentous cells, round cells and cells with changed membrane lipid composition. I have shown that the wildtype and mutant phenotypes can be explained using a stochastic reaction-diffusion model. In E. coli, the transcription elongation rate on the ribosmal RNA operon increases with increasing transcription initiation rate. In addition, the polymerase density varies along the ribosomal RNA operons. I present a DNA sequence dependent model that explains the transcription elongation rate speed-up, and also the density variation along the ribosomal operons. Both phenomena are explained by the RNA polymerase backtracking on the DNA. / Felaktigt tryckt som Digital Comprehensive Summaries of Uppsala Dissertations from the Faculty of Science and Technology 715

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