14 research outputs found

    A versatile gene trap to visualize and interrogate the function of the vertebrate proteome

    Get PDF
    We report a multifunctional gene-trapping approach, which generates full-length Citrine fusions with endogenous proteins and conditional mutants from a single integration event of the FlipTrap vector. We identified 170 FlipTrap zebrafish lines with diverse tissue-specific expression patterns and distinct subcellular localizations of fusion proteins generated by the integration of an internal citrine exon. Cre-mediated conditional mutagenesis is enabled by heterotypic lox sites that delete Citrine and “flip” in its place mCherry with a polyadenylation signal, resulting in a truncated fusion protein. Inducing recombination with Cerulean-Cre results in fusion proteins that often mislocalize, exhibit mutant phenotypes, and dramatically knock down wild-type transcript levels. FRT sites in the vector enable targeted genetic manipulation of the trapped loci in the presence of Flp recombinase. Thus, the FlipTrap captures the functional proteome, enabling the visualization of full-length fluorescent fusion proteins and interrogation of function by conditional mutagenesis and targeted genetic manipulation

    The Genome of the Sea Urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus

    Get PDF
    We report the sequence and analysis of the 814-megabase genome of the sea urchin Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, a model for developmental and systems biology. The sequencing strategy combined whole-genome shotgun and bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) sequences. This use of BAC clones, aided by a pooling strategy, overcame difficulties associated with high heterozygosity of the genome. The genome encodes about 23,300 genes, including many previously thought to be vertebrate innovations or known only outside the deuterostomes. This echinoderm genome provides an evolutionary outgroup for the chordates and yields insights into the evolution of deuterostomes

    The C. elegans ALA Neuron: Its Transcriptions and Roles in Inducing Sleep

    Get PDF
    A long-standing yet to be accomplished task in understanding behavior is to dissect the function of each gene involved in the development and function of a neuron. The C. elegans ALA neuron was chosen in this study for its known function in sleep, an ancient but less understood animal behavior. Single-cell transcriptome profiling identified 8,133 protein-coding genes in the ALA neuron, of which 57 are neuropeptide-coding genes. The most enriched genes are also neuropeptides. In combination with gain-of-function and loss-of-function assays, here I showed that the ALA-enriched FMRFamide neuropeptides, FLP-7, FLP-13, and FLP-24, are sufficient and necessary for inducing C. elegans sleep. These neuropeptides act as neuromodulators through GPCRs, NPR-7, and NPR-22. Further investigation in zebrafish indicates that FMRFamide neuropeptides are sleep-promoting molecules in animals. To correlate the behavioral outputs with genomic context, I constructed a gene regulatory network of the relevant genes controlling C. elegans sleep behavior through EGFR signaling in the ALA neuron. First, I identified an ALA cell-specific motif to conduct a genome-wide search for possible ALA-expressed genes. I then filtered out non ALA-expressed genes by comparing the motif-search genes with ALA transcriptomes from single-cell profiling. In corroborating with ChIP-seq data from modENCODE, I sorted out direct interaction of ALA-expressed transcription factors and differentiation genes in the EGFR sleep regulation pathway. This approach provides a network reference for the molecular regulation of C. elegans sleep behavior, and serves as an entry point for the understanding of functional genomics in animal behaviors
    corecore