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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.
21

Diversité et histoire évolutive de l’ADN alpha satellite chez les Cercopithèques / Diversity and evolutionary history of alpha satellite DNA in Cercopithecini

Cacheux, Lauriane 15 November 2016 (has links)
Les régions centromériques reposent, chez les Primates, sur une famille de séquences répétées en tandem appelée l'ADN alpha satellite. Les monomères de cet ADN (≈170 pb) se sont diversifiés au cours de l'évolution, formant des familles de séquences aux profils d'organisation et distribution variés. La diversité des alphas satellites chez les primates non-humains reste cependant peu caractérisée, et la compréhension de la dynamique évolutive de cet ADN nécessite son intégration dans de plus larges analyses comparatives. Les Cercopithèques, qui présentent une évolution chromosomique originale par fissions et émergences de nouveaux centromères, apparaissent comme des modèles d'étude prometteurs.Nous avons appliqué une nouvelle technologie de séquençage à des monomères et dimères d'alpha satellites, isolés à partir des génomes de Cercopithecus solatus (2n = 60) et C. pogonias (2n = 72). Ces deux espèces appartiennent à des lignées primaires distinctes au sein des Cercopithèques, et ont divergé l'une de l'autre il y a plusieurs millions d'années. L'analyse computationnelle des séquences collectées a permis la caractérisation de six familles d'alpha satellites, dont quatre sont partagées entre espèces et deux ne sont retrouvées que chez C. pogonias. Au moins trois familles seraient impliquées dans des répétitions d'ordre supérieur, profil d'organisation jusque-là inconnu dans l'ADN alpha satellite des Cercopithèques. L'hybridation in situ en fluorescence des familles identifiées, réalisée grâce à des sondes oligonucléotidiques hautement discriminantes, a permis de visualiser leur distribution sur les chromosomes de C. solatus et C. pogonias. Certaines de ces familles se distribuent différentiellement entre chromosomes, révélant l'existence d'une diversité interchromosomique de l'ADN alpha satellite chez les singes de l'Ancien Monde. Leurs positions sur les régions centromériques vont en faveur de l'hypothèse du gradient d'âge des alphas satellites, selon laquelle les familles se forment aux centromères en déplaçant les familles préexistantes vers les péricentromères. L'extension de cette analyse cytogénétique à quinze espèces et l'interprétation de ses résultats à la lumière d'une phylogénie moléculaire, nouvellement reconstruite, nous ont permis de proposer un scénario évolutif pour l'ADN alpha satellite chez les Cercopithèques. Celui-ci apparaît évoluer de manière concertée avec les chromosomes, se diversifiant et se déplaçant sur les régions centromériques à mesure que ces derniers se fissionnent et voient l'émergence de nouveaux centromères. Ces travaux ont enfin apporté des informations nouvelles quant aux relations de parenté entre Cercopithèques, invitant à une intégration de l'ADN alpha satellite dans l'étude de l'histoire évolutive des Primates. L'approche méthodologique mise au point a permis de caractériser la diversité et de comprendre l'évolution de l'ADN alpha satellite chez les Cercopithèques. Elle pourra être appliquée à l'étude de ces séquences particulières chez d'autres primates, ainsi qu'à l'étude de différents satellites chez des espèces primates comme non-primates. / Alpha satellite DNA is the main family of tandemly repeated sequences lying in primate centromere regions. Alpha satellite monomers (≈170 bp) diversified during the course of evolution, forming distinct families of alpha satellite sequences that exhibit specific organizational and distribution patterns. The limited amount of studies concerning non-human primates is a restriction to the understanding of alpha satellite evolutionary dynamics, which calls for the integration of this element into comparative studies. Cercopithecini, which display an unusual chromosomal evolution by multiple fissions and new centromere formations, constitute a promising study model.We carried out next generation sequencing of alpha satellite monomers and dimers isolated from the Cercopithecus solatus (2n = 60) and C. pogonias (2n = 72) genomes. These species belong to different primary lineages within the Cercopithecini tribe and diverged from each other several million years ago. Computational tools were used to analyze the collected sequences and characterize six alpha satellite families, four of them being shared between species and two being limited to C. pogonias. At least three families belong to higher order repeats, an organizational pattern that had never been observed in Cercopithecini. The fluorescence in situ hybridization of each family, performed with highly discriminant oligonucleotide probes, showed their distribution on C. solatus and C. pogonias chromosomes. Some of them distribute on distinct sets of chromosomes, disclosing the existence of alpha satellite interchromosomal diversity in Old World monkeys. Their position along centromeric regions is largely in accordance with the age-gradient hypothesis, according to which new families expand at centromere, thereby splitting and displacing older families toward pericentromeres. The extension of this analysis to fifteen species, combined to a newly reconstructed molecular phylogeny, allowed us to propose an evolutionary scenario for alpha satellite DNA in Cercopithecini. Alpha satellite DNA diversification and displacement on centromere regions appear intimately connected to chromosome rearrangement dynamics, including new centromere formations, which suggests that centromeres and chromosomes evolve in a concerted manner. Finally, this work provided information about Cercopithecini relationships and thus encourages the integration of alpha satellite DNA into the study of primate evolutionary history.Our new methodological approach allowed deciphering alpha satellite diversity and dynamics in Cercopithecini. This framework could be used to study alpha satellite DNA in other primates, and be applied to different satellites in primates as in non-primate species.
22

DNAs satélites e evolução do sistema sexual neo-XY do gafanhoto Ronderosia bergii : uma abordagem citogenômica /

Ferretti, Ana Beatriz Stein Machado. January 2020 (has links)
Orientador: Diogo Cavalcanti Cabral-de-Mello / Resumo: Uma característica comum da evolução dos cromossomos sexuais é a acumulação de DNAs repetitivos, que estão envolvidos em sua diversificação e degeneração. Em gafanhotos o sistema ancestral dos cromossomos sexuais é o XO, mas em algumas espécies os cromossomos sexuais neo-XY surgiram por translocação Robertsonian entre o X ancestral e um par autossômico. Esse é o caso do Ronderosia bergii (Acrididae: Melanoplinae) que adicionalmente também apresentou uma grande inversão pericentrica no neo-Y, fazendo com que essa seja uma espécie singular para o entendimento da evolução dos cromossomos sexuais. Nesse estudo foi caracterizado os DNA satélites e Elementos de Transposição da espécie, com enfoque no entendimento das diferenças entre macho e fêmea e que estão putativamente associados aos cromossomos sexuais. Foi encontrado um total de 54 famílias de DNAs satélites e 56 famílias de TEs. Os DNAsat foram 13,5% mais abundantes no genoma do macho, enquanto os TEs foram apenas 1,02% mais abundantes no genoma da fêmea, evidenciando alta amplificação dos DNAsat no cromossomo neo-Y e menor envolvimento dos TEs na diferenciação dos cromossomos sexuais. A alta diferenciação entre os cromossomos sexuais é observada pela amplificação de múltiplos DNAsat no neo-Y com ocorrência de famílias exclusivamente mapeadas nesse cromossomo, entretanto, algum grau de homologia foi observado. Os dados do mapeamento dos DNAsat evidenciou um alto turnover dos neo-cromossomos sexuais em R.bergii em nível intra... (Resumo completo, clicar acesso eletrônico abaixo) / Abstract: A common characteristic along sex chromosome evolution is the accumulation of repetitive DNAs, which could account for their diversification and degeneration. In grasshoppers the ancestral sex chromosome system is XO, but in some species neo-XY sex chromosome emerged by Robertsonian translocation with an autosomal pair. This is the case of the Melanoplinae Ronderosia bergii that additionally present a large pericentric inversion in the neo-Y, making this a singular species to understand evolution of sex chromosomes. Here we characterized the satellite DNAs and Transposable Elements of the species focused in the understanding of differences between male and female genomes that are putatively associated with sex chromosomes. We found a total of 54 satDNA families and 56 families of TEs. The satDNAs were 13.5% more abundant in male genomes, while TEs were only about 1.02% more abundant in female genome, evidencing high amplification of satDNAs on neo-Y chromosome and minor role of TEs in sex chromosome differentiation. The high differentiation between the sex chromosomes is demonstrated by amplification of multiply satDNAs in neo-Y and occurrence of families exclusively mapped on this chromosome, although some degree of homology was noticed. Our data of chromosomal mapping of satDNAs evidenced high turnover of neo-sex chromosomes in R. bergii at intrapopulation level, caused by multiply paracentric inversions and other rearrangements like amplifications and transpositions. Final... (Complete abstract click electronic access below) / Mestre
23

Bioinformatický nástroj pro anotaci transposonů / Bioinformatics Tool for Transposons Annotation

Jenčo, Michal January 2017 (has links)
This thesis provides theoretical resources for the design of a new bioinformatics tool for transposon annotation with focus on their additional structural elements. There is a biological description of transposons, the mobile elements in DNA, their classification and structure. It further deals with the overview and classification of available transposon identification and annotation bioinformatics tools, description of function and implementation of a select few. Next we state the scheme of a new bioinformatics tool for LTR retrotransposon identification and annotation with a focus on extra ORFs and tandem repeats. The functionality of this new tool was tested on the A. thaliana genome. We identified 95 groups of conserved extra ORFs and 10 groups of conserved tandem repeats.
24

Entwicklung eines FISH-Referenzkaryotyps der Zuckerrübe (Beta vulgaris) für die Integration genetischer Kopplungskarten und die Analyse der chromosomalen Verteilung von repetitiven Sequenzen

Päsold, Susanne 13 January 2014 (has links) (PDF)
Die Verbindung von genetischen, physikalischen und zytologischen Daten ist entscheidend für die Genom- und Chromosomenanalyse. Obwohl Beta vulgaris (2n = 18) als wichtige Kulturpflanze und Untersuchungsobjekt der Grundlagenforschung eine intensiv analysierte Art darstellt, existiert bisher keine Verknüpfung zwischen Kopplungsgruppen (LG) und Chromosomen. B.-vulgaris-Chromosomen können zudem aufgrund fehlender morphologischer Unterscheidungsmerkmale bisher nicht einzeln identifiziert und klassifiziert werden. Somit sind zytogenetisch gewonnene Ergebnisse nicht ohne weiteres auf genetische Kopplungsgruppen und physikalische Karten übertragbar. Zytogenetische Methoden können zur Analyse struktureller Chromosomenveränderungen, zur Identifizierung und Lokalisierung von repetitiver DNA sowie zur Kartierung schwierig zu positionierender Marker verwendet werden. Ziel dieser Arbeit war es daher, ein FISH (Fluoreszenz-in-situ-Hybridisierung)-Verfahren zu etablieren, das die Kopplungsgruppen und Chromosomen der Zuckerrübe korreliert und die mikroskopische Identifizierung aller Chromosomenarme ermöglicht. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde ein FISH-Referenzkaryotyp der Zuckerrübe entwickelt. Durch ein Sondenset aus 18 BACs (bacterial artificial chromosome) sind alle Chromosomenarme der Zuckerrübe identifizierbar und werden mit den nördlichen und südlichen Enden der genetischen Kopplungsgruppen verknüpft. Somit ist eine einheitliche Nummerierung von Kopplungsgruppen und Chromosomen möglich. Durch die gleichzeitige Hybridisierung von chromosomenspezifischen BACs und den Satelliten-DNA-Sonden pAv34 und pBV VI beziehungsweise pEV und pBV wurden die Verteilungsmuster der Sequenzfamilien auf den Chromosomen ermittelt. Die gleichzeitige Hybridisierung aller vier repetitiven Sonden ergab ein chromosomenspezifisches Muster aus subtelomerischen, interkalaren und zentromerischen Signalen. Damit ist die Identifizierung aller B.-vulgaris-Chromosomen in einem einzelnen FISH-Experiment möglich. Zudem wurden dadurch die Chromosomen mit hohem Anteil an tandemartig angeordneten repetitiven Sequenzen identifiziert und die Chromosomenregionen lokalisiert, welche die Sequenzassemblierung behindern können. Sowohl das entwickelte BAC-Set als auch der Sondenpool aus repetitiver DNA unterscheiden die somatischen Metaphasechromosomen erstmals unabhängig von trisomen Linien. Da mit Hilfe der Satelliten-DNA-Sonden alle Chromosomen gleichzeitig markiert werden können, waren die spezifischen physikalischen Längen ermittelbar. Sie wurden mit den genetischen Längen der Kopplungsgruppen in Verbindung gebracht und deckten eine kopplungs-gruppenspezifische Rekombinationshäufigkeit zwischen 0,73 und 1,14 Mb/cM auf. Durch Hybridisierung der BACs und subtelomerischer beziehungsweise telomerischer Sonden auf Pachytänchromosomen wurde der Abstand der BACs sowie der in ihnen enthaltenen genetischen Marker zum physikalischen Chromosomenende abgeschätzt. An fünf Chromo-somenenden wurde ein deutlicher Abstand zwischen den Signalen des BACs und der terminalen Sonden festgestellt. Die zugehörigen Kopplungsgruppen sind demnach erweiterbar. Zudem wurden drei BACs mit nicht detektierbarem Abstand zum Chromosomenende durch FISH an gestreckten Chromatinfasern näher untersucht. Einer der drei BACs wurde eindeutig in unmittelbarer Nähe des Telomers nachgewiesen. Für dieses Ende (Chr 2N) ist die Wahrscheinlichkeit gering, dass die Kopplungsgruppe durch zusätzliche Marker erweitert werden kann; sie wird darum als abgeschlossen angesehen. Für die Enden Chr 4S und Chr 9S war der Abstand zwischen BAC und terminaler Sonde zu groß, um ihn durch Fiber-FISH zu ermitteln. Für sie sind weitere distal zu positionierende Marker wahrscheinlich. Weiterhin wurden bioinformatische Analysen an der verfügbaren B.-vulgaris-Genomsequenz RefBeet 1.0 durchgeführt. Scaffolds, welche die genetischen terminalen Marker enthalten, wurden bioinformatisch identifiziert und auf ihren Gehalt subtelomerischer und telomerischer Sequenzen untersucht. Vorhandene terminale Sequenzen sind ein Nachweis für eine terminale Lokalisierung der in-silico-Chromosomenabschnitte. Für drei Scaffolds mit zuvor ungeklärter Lage wurde dadurch das in-silico-Chromosom ermittelt beziehungsweise die nördliche oder südliche Position auf dem Chromosom dargestellt. Durch die Lokalisierung dieser Bereiche innerhalb der Sequenz in Bezug zum genetischen Marker und unter Berücksichtigung der Ergebnisse der Pachytän-FISH wurde die Strangorientierung von 16 Scaffolds ermittelt. Auf 14 Scaffolds wurden die Abstände der Marker zu den terminalen Sequenzen bestimmt. Der Median betrug etwa 196 kb. Für alle Kopplungsgruppenenden außer dem Norden von LG 2 und LG 4 ist das Vorhandensein weiterer distaler genetischer Marker wahrscheinlich. Satelliten-DNA ist innerhalb einer Art meist homogen, kann jedoch chromosomenspezifische Varianten ausbilden. Auf dem BAC-Marker für Chr 2N wurde durch Southern-Hybridisierung die subtelomerische Sequenzfamilie pAv34 detektiert. Von dem betreffenden BAC wurde eine Subklonbank erstellt. Durch Southern-Hybridisierung wurde der pAv34-Gehalt der Subklone analysiert. Positive Klone wurden sequenziert. Dabei wurden vier verschiedene vollständige pAv34-2N-Monomere detektiert. Im Vergleich mit pAv34-Volllängenmotiven aus der RefBeet 1.0 und dem Datensatz der nicht assemblierten Sequenzen der RefBeet 0.2 bilden die pAv34-2N-Einheiten mit pAv34-Kopien, die verschiedenen in-silico-Chromosomen und Contigs zugeordnet sind, eine Subfamilie. Aus den Sequenzen der Subklone wurden zwei Subklon-Contigs gebildet, die im in-silico-Chromosomenabschnitt von Chr 2N (Bvchr2.un.sca001) positioniert wurden. Dadurch wurden Regionen bisher unbekannter Sequenz entschlüsselt. Abweichungen zwischen den assemblierten Daten und den Subklonsequenzen deuten auf Assemblierungsfehler der Genomsequenz in repetitiven Bereichen hin. Die in dieser Arbeit erzielten Ergebnisse ermöglichen erstmalig die eindeutige Identifizierung aller B.-vulgaris-Chromosomen unabhängig vom Zellzyklusstadium und im Einklang mit genetischen Informationen. Zytogenetische sind jetzt mit molekularen Daten integrierbar und können verwendet werden, um den chromosomenspezifischen Satelliten-DNA-Gehalt aufzudecken und mögliche chromosomenspezifische Subfamilien zu identifizieren. Sie erlauben, physikalische Abstände zwischen Markern zu ermitteln und die Abdeckung von Kopplungsgruppen im terminalen Bereich zu untersuchen. Die Ergebnisse tragen dazu bei, Marker und nicht zugeordnete Contigs und Scaffolds zu kartieren, Ursachen für Lücken aufzudecken und damit die Sequenzdaten des Zuckerrübengenoms zu einer fortlaufenden, hochqualitativen Sequenz zu assemblieren. Die zytogenetischen Daten bilden zudem die Basis für zukünftige Untersuchungen struktureller Umbauten von Chromosomen, die während der Genomevolution stattfanden. / The correlation of genetic, physical and cytological data is crucial for interdisciplinary genome and chromosome analyses. Beta vulgaris (2n = 18) is an important crop and an object of basic research. Although it is an intensely analysed species, its genetic linkage groups (LG) have not been assigned to chromosomes. Additionally, sugar beet chromosomes lack distinct morphological features and could therefore not be identified and classified individually. Consequently, results generated by cytogenetic methods can not be readily applied to genetic and physical maps. Cytogenetic approaches enable analysing structural chromosomal changes, identifying and localizing repetitive DNA, and mapping of markers which are difficult to place within linkage maps. Therefore, the main objective of this work has been the development of a FISH (fluorescence in situ hybridization) procedure that correlates LGs with chromosomes of sugar beet and that allows the microscopic identification of individual chromosome arms. In this work a FISH reference karyotype for sugar beet has been established. A set of 18 BACs (bacterial artificial chromosome) allows the unequivocal identification of each sugar beet chromosome and assigns them to the southern and northern ends of LGs. Hence, the chromosomes are numbered in accordance with the genetic map. The arm-specific BACs and the satellite DNA families pBV and pBV VI or pEV and pAv34 have been hybridized simultaneously to assign the distribution patterns of the highly abundant sequence families to chromosomes. Simultaneous hybridization of the four repetitive probes revealed a chromosome-specific pattern of subtelomeric, intercalary and centromeric signals. Thus, each of the sugar beet chromosomes can be identified in a single FISH experiment. Furthermore, chromosomes with a high content of repetitive DNA have been identified and chromosomal regions that may hinder the correct sequence assembly have been localized. The BAC set as well as the pooled satellite DNA probes discriminate the somatic chromosomes for the first time independently from trisomic lines. Since the chromosomes are differentially labelled with the satellite DNA probes their physical distances could be determined and correlated with genetic distances of the corresponding LGs. A LG-specific recombination frequency from 0.73 to 1.14 Mb/cM has been disclosed. BACs and subtelomeric or telomeric sequences have been hybridized simultaneously on pachytene chromosomes to estimate distances between BACs plus the markers they contain and the physical chromosome ends. Five BACs showed substantial distances to the physical chromosome ends; the corresponding LGs could thus be extended by additional markers. Furthermore, three BACs showing only minor distances to chromosome ends have been investigated in detail by fiber-FISH. One of these BACs was localized closely adjacent to the telomere. For this chromosome end (Chr 2N) it is unlikely that the LG could be extended distally by additional markers and is therefore considered to be closed. The BACs for the chromosome ends Chr 4S and Chr 9S have been too distant from the terminal probe to be bridged by fiber-FISH. For them it is likely that further markers can be placed distally. Furthermore, the B. vulgaris genomic sequence RefBeet 1.0 has been investigated. Scaffolds containing terminal genetic markers have been identified bioinformatically and analysed for the content of subtelomeric and telomeric sequences. The occurrence of terminal sequences confirms the terminal localization of in silico chromosome segments. Three scaffolds with an initially unknown position could thus be allocated to in silico chromosomes and to the northern or southern position on the chromosome. The strand orientation of 16 scaffolds has been determined based on the localization of terminal sequences in relation to the genetic marker considering the results of FISH on pachytene chromosomes. The distance between markers and terminal sequences has been determined for 14 scaffolds. The median is 196 kb. It is likely that further markers can be placed distally from all LG ends except for the north of LG 2 and LG 4. Satellite DNA is usually homogenous within one species; however, it can form chromosome-specific variants. Southern hybridization revealed that the BAC marker for Chr 2N contains the subtelomeric sequence family pAv34. The BAC has been subcloned and the pAv34 content of the subclones has been analysed by Southern hybridization. Positive clones have been sequenced. Thereby, four pAv34-2N monomeres have been detected. Compared to full-length pAv34 motives derived from the RefBeet 1.0 and from unassembled sequence data of the RefBeet 0.2 the pAv34-2N units form a subfamily together with pAv34 copies assigned to different in silico chromosomes and contigs. The subclone sequences have been assembled to two subclone contigs, which have been positioned within the in silico chromosome segment of Chr 2N (Bvchr2.un.sca001). Thereby, regions of unknown sequence have been decoded and probable misassemblies in repetitive regions within the RefBeet 1.0 have been disclosed. The results obtained in this work enable the identification of all sugar beet chromosomes independently from their stage of cell division and in accordance with genetic information. Cytogenetic data are integrated with molecular data and can be used for identifying the chromosome-specific distribution of repeats and chromosome-specific repeat variants. They enable determining physical distances between markers and investigating the terminal coverage of LGs. The results support the correct mapping of markers and unassigned contigs, uncover reasons for gaps within maps and sequence assemblies, and thus contribute to assembling data into a continuous high quality genome sequence of sugar beet. Moreover, the cytogenetic data represent the basis for future investigations of structural chromosomal changes that took place during evolution.
25

Padrões de evolução de sistemas de cromossomos sexuais em grilos: uma abordagem integrada entre citogenética e genômica / Patterns of evolution of sex chromosome systems in crickets: an integrated approach between cytogenetics and genomics

Gimenez, Octavio Manuel Palacios [UNESP] 12 December 2017 (has links)
Submitted by OCTAVIO MANUEL PALACIOS GIMÉNEZ null (opalacios7@gmail.com) on 2018-01-10T10:10:20Z No. of bitstreams: 1 Tesis_completa.pdf: 26112515 bytes, checksum: 3ddefcdf63a47077ccb1b62c384cae1b (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Adriana Aparecida Puerta null (dripuerta@rc.unesp.br) on 2018-01-10T18:40:10Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 gimenez_omp_dr_rcla.pdf: 25788766 bytes, checksum: da0e0599de64bcf81bfb8ddceda0c8e7 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2018-01-10T18:40:10Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 gimenez_omp_dr_rcla.pdf: 25788766 bytes, checksum: da0e0599de64bcf81bfb8ddceda0c8e7 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2017-12-12 / Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP) / Os cromossomos sexuais se originam independentemente de um par de homólogos autossômicos e em várias linhagens apresentam características comuns, tais como acúmulo de vários tipos de DNA repetitivo, restrição da recombinação e perda ou ganho de genes devido á diferenciação morfológica e genética entre os cromossomos sexuais X e Y ou Z e W. Estas características representam um exemplo fascinante de convergência evolutiva. Em Orthoptera, o sistema cromossômico sexual comumente encontrado na maioria das espécies estudadas é do tipo X0♂/XX♀. Entretanto, sistemas cromossômicos sexuais derivados dos tipos neo-XY♂/XX♀ e neo- X1X2Y♂/X1X1X2X2♀ são também observados, surgindo repetidamente por fusões cêntricas e em tandem, inversões e dissociações envolvendo cromossomos sexuais ancestrais e autossomos. O presente trabalho teve três objetivos. Primeiro, entender o possível papel dos DNAs repetitivos na estrutura/diversificação dos cromossomos sexuais simples e derivados, a partir do isolamento e mapeamento físico de sequências, tais como, famílias multigênicas, DNA satélite (DNAsat) e microssatélites, nas espécies Gryllus assimilis, Cycloptiloides americanus e Eneoptera surinamensis. Segundo, testar e comparar transcrição diferencial de DNAsat entre diferentes tecidos, sexos e espécies a partir de transcriptomas de Gryllus assimilis, G. bimaculatus, G. firmus e G. rubens, com o objetivo de entender os possíveis papéis funcionais destas sequências na regulação gênica, modulação da cromatina e como componentes funcionais de importantes estruturas como telômeros, centrômeros e cromossomos sexuais. Terceiro, a partir de transcriptomas de espécies de grilos (Gryllus assimilis, G. bimaculatus e G. firmus) prospectar genes codificadores de proteínas relacionados com a determinação sexual, envolvidos com o fitness reprodutivo e genes enviesados do sexo, responsáveis pelas diferenças fenotípicas entre machos e fêmeas, e tentar elucidar de uma maneira comparativa os fatores evolutivos atuando nestes loci. Origem de novo de cromossomos sexuais mediante rearranjos cromossômicos, assim como acúmulo de DNA repetitivo que levaram a diferenciação entre cromossomos sexuais são relatados em C. americanus (X1X20) e E. surianmensis (neo-X1X2Y). Estas características observadas em grilos representam outro caso notável de convergência evolutiva devido os cromossomos sexuais não relacionados compartilharem muitas propriedades entre táxons distantes. Acúmulo surpreendente de loci de DNAsat foi encontrado no neo-Y altamente diferenciado de E. surinamensis, incluindo 39 DNAsat representados em excesso neste cromossomo, que é a maior diversidade de DNAsat até agora relatada para cromossomos sexuais. Foi documentado que, particularmente os DNAsat, contribuíram grandemente para o aumento de tamanho genômico entre G. assimilis e E. surinamensis. Um achado interessante foi a identificação de DNAsat conservados entre espécies de grilos (Gryllus assimilis, G. bimaculatus e G. firmus), mas transcritos diferencialmente. Os dados relativos à presença de DNAsat no genoma de G. assimilis foram discutidos em um contexto evolutivo, com dados transcricionais permitindo comparações entre os sexos e entre os tecidos quando possível. Foram discutidas hipóteses para a conservação e transcrição de DNAsat em Gryllus, que podem resultar do seu papel na diferenciação sexual no nível da cromatina, na formação da heterocromatina e na função centromérica. Outra descoberta foi a identificação de genes determinantes do sexo e outros genes relacionados ao fitness reprodutivo, como a biossíntese de hormônios de insetos e ritmo circadiano entre espécies de Gryllus. Os efetores e os alvos downstream das vias de determinação do sexo foram previamente identificados em outros insetos, mas nunca em Orthoptera. Usando G. assimilis como modelo para estudar genes enviesados do sexo foi possível identificar um conjunto de genes altamente expressos que podem explicar diferenças fenotípicas entre os sexos. Estimou-se que os genes codificadores de proteínas relacionadas com a diferenciação sexual e com o fitness reprodutivo evoluem mais rapidamente do que os genes não reprodutivos (genes housekeeping) como resultado de uma forte seleção positiva nos primeiros. Além disso, foi encontrado que as espécies estudadas apresentam níveis excepcionalmente elevados de duplicações gênicas. As descobertas sugerem que as duplicações gênicas podem desempenhar um papel na expressão de genes enviesados do sexo no grilo de campo G. assimilis, uma espécie que no futuro provavelmente irá fornecer informações sobre genômica funcional e epigenética da determinação do sexo. / Sex chromosomes have arisen independently from an ordinary autosomal pair and in several lineages they present common characteristics, such as accumulation of distinct classes of repetitive DNAs, restriction of the recombination and loss or gain of genes due to the morphological and genetic differentiation between the sexual chromosomes X and Y or Z and W. These characteristics represent a fascinating example of evolutionary convergence. In Orthoptera, the X0♂/XX♀ sex-determining system is considered modal but eventually, diverse sex chromosome systems evolved several times, such as neo-XY♂/XX♀, X1X20♂/X1X1X2X2♀ and even neo- X1X2Y♂/X1X1X2X2♀. It was found that particularly centric fusions (i.e., Robertsonian translocations) and tandem fusions with autosomes, dissociations and inversions contributed to the formation of neo-sex chromosomes in Orthoptera. The present work had three objectives. First, get insights of the role of repetitive DNAs in the structure/diversification of simple and derivative sex-chromosomes by isolation and physical mapping of repetitive DNA sequences, such as multigene families, satellite DNA (satDNA) and microsatellites using Gryllus assimilis, Cycloptiloides americanus e Eneoptera surinamensis, as models. Second, looking at differential satDNA transcription between different tissues, sexes, and species from transcriptomes of Gryllus assimilis, G. bimaculatus, G. firmus and G. rubens, I tried to understand the possible functional roles of these sequences in gene regulation, chromatin modulation and as functional components of important structures such as telomeres, centromeres and sex chromosomes. Third, using transcriptomes from cricket species (Gryllus assimilis, G. bimaculatus and G. firmus), I searched for genes encoding proteins related to sexual determination, reproductive fitness and sex-biased genes which are responsible for the phenotypic differences between males and females. I also tried to elucidate in a comparative way the evolutionary factors acting at these loci. De novo origin of sex chromosomes by chromosomal rearrangements, as well as repetitive DNA accumulation that led to the differentiation between sex chromosomes are reported for C. americanus (X1X20) e E. surianmensis (neo-X1X2Y). These features observed in crickets represent another remarkable case of evolutionary convergence because unrelated sex chromosomes share many common properties among distant taxa. Especially astonishing accumulation of satDNAs loci was found in the highly differentiated neo-Y, including 39 satDNAs over-represented in this chromosome, which is the greatest satDNAs diversity yet reported for sex chromosomes. It has been documented that, particularly the satDNA, contributed greatly to the increase in genomic size between G. assimilis and E. surinamensis. An interesting finding was the identification of satDNA conserved among species of crickets (Gryllus assimilis, G. bimaculatus and G. firmus), but differentially transcribed. The data regarding satDNA presence in G. assimilis genome was discussed in an evolutionary context, with transcriptional data enabling comparisons between sexes and across tissues when possible. I discussed hypotheses for the conservation and transcription of satDNAs in Gryllus, which might result from their role in sexual differentiation at the chromatin level, heterochromatin formation, and centromeric function. Another finding was the identification of sex-determining genes and other genes related to reproductive fitness, such as biosynthesis of insect hormones and circadian rhythm among Gryllus species. The effectors as well as downstream targets of sex-determination pathways have been previously identified in other insects but never in Orthoptera. Using G. assimilis to study sex-biased genes I identified a set of highly expressed genes that might account for phenotypic differences between sexes. Furthermore, I estimated that proteinencoding reproductive genes evolve faster than non-reproductive genes as result of strong positive selection at those loci. It was documented that the species studied harbor exceptionally high levels of gene duplications. The findings suggest that gene duplications may play a role in sex-biased genes expression in the field cricket G. assimilis, a species likely to yield insights into the functional genomics and epigenetics of sex determination. / FAPESP: 2014/02038-8
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Rekonstrukce repetitivních elementů DNA / Reconstruction of Repetitive Elements in DNA

Hypský, Jan January 2018 (has links)
Eukaryotic genomes contain a large number of repetitive structures. Their detection and assembly today are the main challenges of bioinformatics. This work includes a classification of repetitive DNA and represents an implementation of a novel de novo assembler focusing on searching and constructing LTR retrotransposons and satellite DNA. Assembler accepts on his input short reads (single or pair-end), obtained from next-generation sequencing machines (NGS). This assembler is based on Overlap Layout Consensus approach.
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Higher-Order Unfolding of Peri/Centric Satellite Heterochromatin is an Early and Consistent Event in Cell Senescence: A Dissertation

Swanson, Eric C. 18 December 2014 (has links)
Cellular senescence is thought to play an essential role in many biological functions including tumor suppression and organismal aging. Senescent cells, which are permanently removed from the cell cycle, can be found both in vivo in many different tissue types and in vitro within cultures of non-immortalized cells. Despite their inability to proliferate, these cells persist and remain metabolically active for indefinite periods of time. This physiologic process occurs in response to a variety of cellular insults including oxidative stress, shortened telomeres, constitutive oncogene expression, and DNA damage, and can be initiated by upregulation of one of the two known senescent pathways, involving p16/Rb or p53/p21. The senescent cell phenotype is also characterized by changes to cell and nuclear morphology and to the secretory profile of the cell. Related to changes in nuclear morphology, epigenetic modifications to the packaging of DNA are thought to be key to the initiation and maintenance of the senescence program. While a large number of earlier studies focused on the findings that senescent cells gain regions of condensed heterochromatin, often in the form of Senescent Associated Heterochromatin Foci (SAHF), this thesis work shows that there is a marked loss of heterochromatin in the peri/centromeric regions of the genome. In fact, both α-satellite and satellite II sequences across the genome distend in a striking and unanticipated fashion; this can be readily visualized by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) as their structure changes from a condensed spot to highly elongated and fine thread-like signals. We have termed this exceptional decondensation of constitutive heterochromatin Senescence Associated Distension of Satellites (SADS). Importantly, a series of experiments shows that SADS is both a consistent and an early event in the cell senescence process, which occurs as a result of every senescence induction method examined. We also observed that this distension was characteristic of both human and murine cells and in vivo in human benign Prostatic Intraepithelial Neoplasia (PIN) tissue. Furthermore, unlike SAHF formation, SADS can occur due to the activation of either of the two senescence pathways, p16/Rb or p53/p21. Additionally, the cytological dimensions of the thread-like satellite signals indicates that SADS represents “unraveling” of DNA on an unprecedented scale. Thus, it was surprising that this event was not facilitated by changes to several canonical histone modifications associated with condensed heterochromatin, namely H3K9Me3, H3K27Me3, or H3K4Me3, nor is it caused by loss of DNA methylation. Consequently, we believe that this marked distension of satellite DNA is due to changes in higher-order folding of the chromatin fiber. This is important for understanding fundamental events in the cell senescence process, but also provides a unique system for study of chromatin packaging that may provide new insights into the organization of DNA well beyond nucleosome packaging and the ten nanometer fiber. In fact, initial super resolution images of SADS suggest that the satellite sequences may be organized into domains or “globules”. Hence, we suggest that the changes to satellite sequence packaging may be facilitated by changes to higher-order nuclear structural proteins, such as LaminB1, which is reduced in senescent cells. Finally, this work provides analysis of the literature and preliminary experiments to consider the possibility that there are increased levels of cell senescence in Down syndrome (trisomy 21) cells. As individuals with Down syndrome (DS) experience many manifestations of premature aging (including early-onset Alzheimer’s Disease), have a resistance to solid tumor formation, are more susceptible to oxidative stress, and are trisomic for several genes implicated in causing senescence, our analysis provides plausibility for the hypothesis that accelerated rates of senescence may play a significant role in DS physiology. We also provide results of preliminary studies and outline the next steps for experimentation, using DS fibroblasts and a unique genetically engineered DS iPS cell system. As a final note, the quantification of cell senescence in trisomic versus disomic cells for these experiments relies substantially on the new single-cell marker of senescence discovered and established by this theses work, the Senescence-Associated Distension of Satellites.
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Entwicklung eines FISH-Referenzkaryotyps der Zuckerrübe (Beta vulgaris) für die Integration genetischer Kopplungskarten und die Analyse der chromosomalen Verteilung von repetitiven Sequenzen

Päsold, Susanne 19 December 2013 (has links)
Die Verbindung von genetischen, physikalischen und zytologischen Daten ist entscheidend für die Genom- und Chromosomenanalyse. Obwohl Beta vulgaris (2n = 18) als wichtige Kulturpflanze und Untersuchungsobjekt der Grundlagenforschung eine intensiv analysierte Art darstellt, existiert bisher keine Verknüpfung zwischen Kopplungsgruppen (LG) und Chromosomen. B.-vulgaris-Chromosomen können zudem aufgrund fehlender morphologischer Unterscheidungsmerkmale bisher nicht einzeln identifiziert und klassifiziert werden. Somit sind zytogenetisch gewonnene Ergebnisse nicht ohne weiteres auf genetische Kopplungsgruppen und physikalische Karten übertragbar. Zytogenetische Methoden können zur Analyse struktureller Chromosomenveränderungen, zur Identifizierung und Lokalisierung von repetitiver DNA sowie zur Kartierung schwierig zu positionierender Marker verwendet werden. Ziel dieser Arbeit war es daher, ein FISH (Fluoreszenz-in-situ-Hybridisierung)-Verfahren zu etablieren, das die Kopplungsgruppen und Chromosomen der Zuckerrübe korreliert und die mikroskopische Identifizierung aller Chromosomenarme ermöglicht. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde ein FISH-Referenzkaryotyp der Zuckerrübe entwickelt. Durch ein Sondenset aus 18 BACs (bacterial artificial chromosome) sind alle Chromosomenarme der Zuckerrübe identifizierbar und werden mit den nördlichen und südlichen Enden der genetischen Kopplungsgruppen verknüpft. Somit ist eine einheitliche Nummerierung von Kopplungsgruppen und Chromosomen möglich. Durch die gleichzeitige Hybridisierung von chromosomenspezifischen BACs und den Satelliten-DNA-Sonden pAv34 und pBV VI beziehungsweise pEV und pBV wurden die Verteilungsmuster der Sequenzfamilien auf den Chromosomen ermittelt. Die gleichzeitige Hybridisierung aller vier repetitiven Sonden ergab ein chromosomenspezifisches Muster aus subtelomerischen, interkalaren und zentromerischen Signalen. Damit ist die Identifizierung aller B.-vulgaris-Chromosomen in einem einzelnen FISH-Experiment möglich. Zudem wurden dadurch die Chromosomen mit hohem Anteil an tandemartig angeordneten repetitiven Sequenzen identifiziert und die Chromosomenregionen lokalisiert, welche die Sequenzassemblierung behindern können. Sowohl das entwickelte BAC-Set als auch der Sondenpool aus repetitiver DNA unterscheiden die somatischen Metaphasechromosomen erstmals unabhängig von trisomen Linien. Da mit Hilfe der Satelliten-DNA-Sonden alle Chromosomen gleichzeitig markiert werden können, waren die spezifischen physikalischen Längen ermittelbar. Sie wurden mit den genetischen Längen der Kopplungsgruppen in Verbindung gebracht und deckten eine kopplungs-gruppenspezifische Rekombinationshäufigkeit zwischen 0,73 und 1,14 Mb/cM auf. Durch Hybridisierung der BACs und subtelomerischer beziehungsweise telomerischer Sonden auf Pachytänchromosomen wurde der Abstand der BACs sowie der in ihnen enthaltenen genetischen Marker zum physikalischen Chromosomenende abgeschätzt. An fünf Chromo-somenenden wurde ein deutlicher Abstand zwischen den Signalen des BACs und der terminalen Sonden festgestellt. Die zugehörigen Kopplungsgruppen sind demnach erweiterbar. Zudem wurden drei BACs mit nicht detektierbarem Abstand zum Chromosomenende durch FISH an gestreckten Chromatinfasern näher untersucht. Einer der drei BACs wurde eindeutig in unmittelbarer Nähe des Telomers nachgewiesen. Für dieses Ende (Chr 2N) ist die Wahrscheinlichkeit gering, dass die Kopplungsgruppe durch zusätzliche Marker erweitert werden kann; sie wird darum als abgeschlossen angesehen. Für die Enden Chr 4S und Chr 9S war der Abstand zwischen BAC und terminaler Sonde zu groß, um ihn durch Fiber-FISH zu ermitteln. Für sie sind weitere distal zu positionierende Marker wahrscheinlich. Weiterhin wurden bioinformatische Analysen an der verfügbaren B.-vulgaris-Genomsequenz RefBeet 1.0 durchgeführt. Scaffolds, welche die genetischen terminalen Marker enthalten, wurden bioinformatisch identifiziert und auf ihren Gehalt subtelomerischer und telomerischer Sequenzen untersucht. Vorhandene terminale Sequenzen sind ein Nachweis für eine terminale Lokalisierung der in-silico-Chromosomenabschnitte. Für drei Scaffolds mit zuvor ungeklärter Lage wurde dadurch das in-silico-Chromosom ermittelt beziehungsweise die nördliche oder südliche Position auf dem Chromosom dargestellt. Durch die Lokalisierung dieser Bereiche innerhalb der Sequenz in Bezug zum genetischen Marker und unter Berücksichtigung der Ergebnisse der Pachytän-FISH wurde die Strangorientierung von 16 Scaffolds ermittelt. Auf 14 Scaffolds wurden die Abstände der Marker zu den terminalen Sequenzen bestimmt. Der Median betrug etwa 196 kb. Für alle Kopplungsgruppenenden außer dem Norden von LG 2 und LG 4 ist das Vorhandensein weiterer distaler genetischer Marker wahrscheinlich. Satelliten-DNA ist innerhalb einer Art meist homogen, kann jedoch chromosomenspezifische Varianten ausbilden. Auf dem BAC-Marker für Chr 2N wurde durch Southern-Hybridisierung die subtelomerische Sequenzfamilie pAv34 detektiert. Von dem betreffenden BAC wurde eine Subklonbank erstellt. Durch Southern-Hybridisierung wurde der pAv34-Gehalt der Subklone analysiert. Positive Klone wurden sequenziert. Dabei wurden vier verschiedene vollständige pAv34-2N-Monomere detektiert. Im Vergleich mit pAv34-Volllängenmotiven aus der RefBeet 1.0 und dem Datensatz der nicht assemblierten Sequenzen der RefBeet 0.2 bilden die pAv34-2N-Einheiten mit pAv34-Kopien, die verschiedenen in-silico-Chromosomen und Contigs zugeordnet sind, eine Subfamilie. Aus den Sequenzen der Subklone wurden zwei Subklon-Contigs gebildet, die im in-silico-Chromosomenabschnitt von Chr 2N (Bvchr2.un.sca001) positioniert wurden. Dadurch wurden Regionen bisher unbekannter Sequenz entschlüsselt. Abweichungen zwischen den assemblierten Daten und den Subklonsequenzen deuten auf Assemblierungsfehler der Genomsequenz in repetitiven Bereichen hin. Die in dieser Arbeit erzielten Ergebnisse ermöglichen erstmalig die eindeutige Identifizierung aller B.-vulgaris-Chromosomen unabhängig vom Zellzyklusstadium und im Einklang mit genetischen Informationen. Zytogenetische sind jetzt mit molekularen Daten integrierbar und können verwendet werden, um den chromosomenspezifischen Satelliten-DNA-Gehalt aufzudecken und mögliche chromosomenspezifische Subfamilien zu identifizieren. Sie erlauben, physikalische Abstände zwischen Markern zu ermitteln und die Abdeckung von Kopplungsgruppen im terminalen Bereich zu untersuchen. Die Ergebnisse tragen dazu bei, Marker und nicht zugeordnete Contigs und Scaffolds zu kartieren, Ursachen für Lücken aufzudecken und damit die Sequenzdaten des Zuckerrübengenoms zu einer fortlaufenden, hochqualitativen Sequenz zu assemblieren. Die zytogenetischen Daten bilden zudem die Basis für zukünftige Untersuchungen struktureller Umbauten von Chromosomen, die während der Genomevolution stattfanden. / The correlation of genetic, physical and cytological data is crucial for interdisciplinary genome and chromosome analyses. Beta vulgaris (2n = 18) is an important crop and an object of basic research. Although it is an intensely analysed species, its genetic linkage groups (LG) have not been assigned to chromosomes. Additionally, sugar beet chromosomes lack distinct morphological features and could therefore not be identified and classified individually. Consequently, results generated by cytogenetic methods can not be readily applied to genetic and physical maps. Cytogenetic approaches enable analysing structural chromosomal changes, identifying and localizing repetitive DNA, and mapping of markers which are difficult to place within linkage maps. Therefore, the main objective of this work has been the development of a FISH (fluorescence in situ hybridization) procedure that correlates LGs with chromosomes of sugar beet and that allows the microscopic identification of individual chromosome arms. In this work a FISH reference karyotype for sugar beet has been established. A set of 18 BACs (bacterial artificial chromosome) allows the unequivocal identification of each sugar beet chromosome and assigns them to the southern and northern ends of LGs. Hence, the chromosomes are numbered in accordance with the genetic map. The arm-specific BACs and the satellite DNA families pBV and pBV VI or pEV and pAv34 have been hybridized simultaneously to assign the distribution patterns of the highly abundant sequence families to chromosomes. Simultaneous hybridization of the four repetitive probes revealed a chromosome-specific pattern of subtelomeric, intercalary and centromeric signals. Thus, each of the sugar beet chromosomes can be identified in a single FISH experiment. Furthermore, chromosomes with a high content of repetitive DNA have been identified and chromosomal regions that may hinder the correct sequence assembly have been localized. The BAC set as well as the pooled satellite DNA probes discriminate the somatic chromosomes for the first time independently from trisomic lines. Since the chromosomes are differentially labelled with the satellite DNA probes their physical distances could be determined and correlated with genetic distances of the corresponding LGs. A LG-specific recombination frequency from 0.73 to 1.14 Mb/cM has been disclosed. BACs and subtelomeric or telomeric sequences have been hybridized simultaneously on pachytene chromosomes to estimate distances between BACs plus the markers they contain and the physical chromosome ends. Five BACs showed substantial distances to the physical chromosome ends; the corresponding LGs could thus be extended by additional markers. Furthermore, three BACs showing only minor distances to chromosome ends have been investigated in detail by fiber-FISH. One of these BACs was localized closely adjacent to the telomere. For this chromosome end (Chr 2N) it is unlikely that the LG could be extended distally by additional markers and is therefore considered to be closed. The BACs for the chromosome ends Chr 4S and Chr 9S have been too distant from the terminal probe to be bridged by fiber-FISH. For them it is likely that further markers can be placed distally. Furthermore, the B. vulgaris genomic sequence RefBeet 1.0 has been investigated. Scaffolds containing terminal genetic markers have been identified bioinformatically and analysed for the content of subtelomeric and telomeric sequences. The occurrence of terminal sequences confirms the terminal localization of in silico chromosome segments. Three scaffolds with an initially unknown position could thus be allocated to in silico chromosomes and to the northern or southern position on the chromosome. The strand orientation of 16 scaffolds has been determined based on the localization of terminal sequences in relation to the genetic marker considering the results of FISH on pachytene chromosomes. The distance between markers and terminal sequences has been determined for 14 scaffolds. The median is 196 kb. It is likely that further markers can be placed distally from all LG ends except for the north of LG 2 and LG 4. Satellite DNA is usually homogenous within one species; however, it can form chromosome-specific variants. Southern hybridization revealed that the BAC marker for Chr 2N contains the subtelomeric sequence family pAv34. The BAC has been subcloned and the pAv34 content of the subclones has been analysed by Southern hybridization. Positive clones have been sequenced. Thereby, four pAv34-2N monomeres have been detected. Compared to full-length pAv34 motives derived from the RefBeet 1.0 and from unassembled sequence data of the RefBeet 0.2 the pAv34-2N units form a subfamily together with pAv34 copies assigned to different in silico chromosomes and contigs. The subclone sequences have been assembled to two subclone contigs, which have been positioned within the in silico chromosome segment of Chr 2N (Bvchr2.un.sca001). Thereby, regions of unknown sequence have been decoded and probable misassemblies in repetitive regions within the RefBeet 1.0 have been disclosed. The results obtained in this work enable the identification of all sugar beet chromosomes independently from their stage of cell division and in accordance with genetic information. Cytogenetic data are integrated with molecular data and can be used for identifying the chromosome-specific distribution of repeats and chromosome-specific repeat variants. They enable determining physical distances between markers and investigating the terminal coverage of LGs. The results support the correct mapping of markers and unassigned contigs, uncover reasons for gaps within maps and sequence assemblies, and thus contribute to assembling data into a continuous high quality genome sequence of sugar beet. Moreover, the cytogenetic data represent the basis for future investigations of structural chromosomal changes that took place during evolution.
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Towards the development of transgenic banana bunchy top virus (BBTV)-resistant banana plants : interference with replication

Tsao, Theresa Tsun-Hui January 2008 (has links)
Banana bunchy top virus (BBTV) causes one of the most devastating diseases of banana. Transgenic virus resistance is now considered one of the most promising strategies to control BBTV. Pathogen-derived resistance (PDR) strategies have been applied successfully to generate plants that are resistant to numerous different viruses, primarily against those viruses with RNA genomes. BBTV is a circular, single-stranded (css) DNA virus of the family Nanoviridae, which is closely related to the family Geminiviridae. Although there are some successful examples of PDR against geminiviruses, PDR against the nanoviruses has not been reported. Therefore, the aim of this thesis was to investigate the potential of BBTV genes to interfere with virus replication when used as transgenes for engineering banana plants resistance to BBTV. The replication initiation protein (Rep) of nanoviruses is the only viral protein essential for viral replication and represents an ideal target for PDR. Therefore, this thesis focused on the effect of wild-type or mutated Rep genes from BBTV satellite DNAs or the BBTV integral genome on the replication of BBTV in banana embryogenic cell suspensions. A new Rep-encoding satellite DNA, designated BBTV DNA-S4, was isolated from a Vietnamese BBTV isolate and characterised. When the effect of DNA-S4 on the replication of BBTV was examined, it was found that DNA-S4 enhanced the replication of BBTV. When the replicative capabilities of DNA-S4 and the previously characterised Rep-encoding BBTV satellite, DNA-S1, were compared, it was found that the amount of DNA-S4 accumulated to higher levels than DNA-S1. The interaction between BBTV and DNA-S1 was also examined. It was found that over-expression of the Rep encoded by DNA-S1 using ubi1 maize polyubiquitin promoter enhanced replication of BBTV. However, when the Rep-encoded by DNA-S1 was expressed by the native S1 promoter (in plasmid pBT1.1-S1), it suppressed the replication of BBTV. Based on this result, the use of DNA-S1 as a possible transgene to generate PDR against BBTV was investigated. The roles of the Rep-encoding and U5 genes of BBTV DNA-R, and the effects of over-expression of these two genes on BBTV replication were also investigated. Three mutants of BBTV DNA-R were constructed; plasmid pUbi-RepOnly-nos contained the ubi1 promoter driving Rep expression from DNA-R, plasmid pUbi-IntOnly-nos contained the ubi1 promoter driving expression of the DNA-R internal gene product (U5), while plasmid pUbi-R.ORF-nos contained the ubi1 promoter driving the expression of both Rep and the internal U5 gene product. The replication of BBTV was found to be significantly suppressed by pUbi-RepOnly-nos, weakly suppressed by pUbi-IntOnly-nos, but strongly enhanced by pUbi-R.ORF-nos. The effect of mutations in three conserved residues within the BBTV Rep on BBTV replication was also assessed. These mutations were all made in the regions in the ATPase motifs and resulted in changes from hydrophilic to hydrophobic residues (i.e. K187→M, D224→I and N268→L). None of these Rep mutants was able to initiate BBTV replication. However, over-expression of Reps containing the K187→M or N268→L mutations significantly suppressed the replication of BBTV. In summary, the Rep constructs that significantly suppressed replication of DNA-R and -C in banana embryogenic cell suspensions have the potential to confer resistance against BBTV by interfering with virus replication. It may be concluded that BBTV satellite DNAs are not ideal for conferring PDR because they did not suppress BBTV replication consistently. Wild-type Rep transcripts and mutated (i.e. K187→M and N248→L) Rep proteins of BBTV DNA-R, however, when over-expressed by a strong promoter, are all promising candidates for generating BBTV-resistant banana plants.
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Os cromossomos holocêntricos de rhynchospora vahl (cyperaceae): Evolução cariotípica e diversidade de sequências satélites

SANTOS, Tiago Ribeiro Barros dos 04 March 2016 (has links)
Submitted by Irene Nascimento (irene.kessia@ufpe.br) on 2016-08-12T19:39:07Z No. of bitstreams: 2 license_rdf: 1232 bytes, checksum: 66e71c371cc565284e70f40736c94386 (MD5) Tese_versão_final_biblioteca_português.pdf: 2265965 bytes, checksum: 707851ccf48e28513fc34178bca7c739 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2016-08-12T19:39:07Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 license_rdf: 1232 bytes, checksum: 66e71c371cc565284e70f40736c94386 (MD5) Tese_versão_final_biblioteca_português.pdf: 2265965 bytes, checksum: 707851ccf48e28513fc34178bca7c739 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2016-03-04 / Capes / Cromossomos holocêntricos apresentam atividade cinetocórica difusa e essa organização favorece, em teoria, rápidas variações cromossômicas numéricas e o acúmulo de DNA satélite (DNAsat) predominantemente nas regiões terminais dos cromossomos. O gênero de plantas Rhynchospora (Cyperaceae), um dos diversos grupos com esse tipo cromossômico, apresenta espécies com cariótipos entre 2n = 4 e 2n = 58, cuja variação é atribuída à poliploidia e a eventos de quebra/fusão, levando a disploidias. Quanto à distribuição de DNAsat, o único relato até o momento revelou uma baixa proporção dessas sequências, com o único repeat identificado (Tyba) associado aos holocentrômeros. Com o intuito de entender como a estrutura centromérica difusa interfere na organização de sequências ao longo do cromossomo e na evolução do cariótipo como um todo, foram realizadas uma análise de reconstrução dos números cromossômicos ancestrais de Rhynchospora em um contexto filogenético e a caracterização de DNAsats em três espécies do gênero. O complemento cromossômico 2n = 10 foi indicado como o mais provável para o ancestral do gênero, tendo sido mantido em diferentes taxa. A maioria dos clados mostrou números estáveis e a homoplasia de cariótipos foi observada em uma frequência relativamente baixa. Os genomas de R. ciliata/R. globosa e R. tenuis apresentaram duas e uma família(s) de DNAsat, respectivamente, com um padrão de condensação típico (blocos condensados em intérfase). Uma localização preferencial nos terminais cromossômicos foi observada apenas para os DNAsat de R. globosa. Três tipos de cromatina foram revelados pela distribuição dessas sequências: (1) associadas à heterocromatina e presente na forma de cromocentros em intérfase e blocos nos cromossomos metafásicos (R. ciliata e R. globosa); (2) compactados em interfase mas parcialmente descondensados em metáfase e não diretamente associados à heterocromatina (R. ciliata e R. tenuis); ou (3) associados aos holocentrômeros (R. ciliata e R. tenuis). De forma geral em Rhynchospora, os eventos de fusão e fissão parecem atuar localmente no remodelamento dos cariótipos e as sequências satélites não mostram uma tendência única de distribuição. A estrutura centromérica difusa, portanto, não determina em larga escala a dinâmica evolutiva dos cromossomos do gênero. / Holocentric chromosomes show diffuse kinetochore activity, what would lead to fast evolution of chromosome numbers and a biased distribution of satellite repeats. The plant genus Rhynchospora (Cyperaceae) possesses holocentric chromosomes and shows a large chromosome number variation (2n = 4 to 2n = 58) attributed to polyploidy and frequent fusion/fission events, leading to dysploidy. Regarding satellite repeats (satDNA), the only investigated species showed a low proportion of these sequences, with the single family identified associated to the holocentromeres. In the present work, aiming to better understand how the diffuse centromere organisation could interfere with the distribution of satellite repeats along the chromosomes and with the karyotype evolution as a whole, we combined a reconstruction of Rhynchospora chromosome numbers in a phylogenetic framework and the characterisation of satellite repeats in three selected species. The karyotype with 2n = 10 was suggested as the ancestral state and was maintained in different lineages. Most of the clades showed stable chromosome number and recurrent karyotypes changes (leading to homoplasies) were detected in low frequency. All Rhynchospora species analysed (R. ciliata, R. globosa and R. tenuis) showed a higher diversity of satellite repeats than R. pubera, with most of the repeats showing a typical condensation profile (clustered in interphase). A preferential terminal location on chromosomes was only observed for R. globosa satDNAs. These sequences, however, might represent different chromatin types, organized in distinct ways: (1) associated to the heterochromatin and clustered in interphase and metaphase (identified in R. ciliata and R. globosa only); (2) clustered in interphase but partially decondensed in metaphase and not associated to heterochromatin domains (R. ciliata e R. tenuis); (3) associated to the holocentromeres (R. ciliata e R. tenuis). Taken together, at least for Rhynchospora, fusion/fission events may not act in a broader way in the reshuffling of karyotypes and satellite repeats distribution do not appeared to be biased towards the chromosome termini. A non-localized centromere, therefore, must not constrain, in a large scale, the chromosome evolution of the genus.

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