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Thermodynamic Models for the Analysis of Quantitative Transcriptional Regulation

Understanding transcriptional regulation quantitatively is a crucial step towards uncovering and ultimately utilizing the regulatory semantics encoded in the genome. Transcription of a gene is induced by the binding of site-specific transcription factors (TFs) to so-called cis-regulatory-modules (CRMs). The frequency and duration of the binding events are influenced by the concentrations of the TFs, the binding affinities and location of the transcription factor binding sites (TFBSs) in the CRM as well as the properties of the TFs themselves (e.g. effectiveness, competitive interaction with other TFs). Modeling these interactions using a mathematical approach, based on sound biochemical and thermodynamic foundations, enables the understanding and quantitative prediction of transcriptional output of a target gene. In the thesis I introduce the developed framework for modeling, visualizing, and predicting the regulation of the transcription rate of a target gene. Given the concentrations of a set of TFs, the TFBSs in a regulatory DNA region, and the transcription rate of the target gene, the method will optimize its parameters to generate a predictive model that incorporates the regulatory mechanism of the observed gene. I demonstrate the generalization ability of the model by subjecting it to standard machine learning and hypothesis testing procedures. Furthermore, I demonstrate the potential of the approach by training the method on a gene in D. melanogaster and predicting the output of the homologous genes in 12 other Drosophila species where the regulatory sequence has evolved substantially but the regulatory mechanism was conserved. Finally, I investigate the proposed role-switching behaviour of TFs regulating the development of D. melanogaster, which suggests that SUMOylation is the biological mechanism facilitating the switch.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ADTP/280495
CreatorsDenis Bauer
Source SetsAustraliasian Digital Theses Program
Detected LanguageEnglish

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