48 research outputs found
Transcriptomic insights into genetic diversity of protein-coding genes in X. laevis
© The Author(s), 2017. This is the author's version of the work and is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Developmental Biology 424 (2017): 181-188, doi:10.1016/j.ydbio.2017.02.019We characterize the genetic diversity of Xenopus laevis strains using RNA-seq data and allele-
specific analysis. This data provides a catalogue of coding variation, which can be used for improving
the genomic sequence, as well as for better sequence alignment, probe design, and proteomic
analysis. In addition, we paint a broad picture of the genetic landscape of the species by functionally
annotating different classes of mutations with a well-established prediction tool (PolyPhen-2).
Further, we specifically compare the variation in the progeny of four crosses: inbred genomic (J)-
strain, outbred albino (B)-strain, and two hybrid crosses of J and B strains. We identify a subset of
mutations specific to the B strain, which allows us to investigate the selection pressures affecting
duplicated genes in this allotetraploid. From these crosses we find the ratio of non-synonymous to
synonymous mutations is lower in duplicated genes, which suggests that they are under greater
purifying selection. Surprisingly, we also find that function-altering ("damaging") mutations constitute
a greater fraction of the non-synonymous variants in this group, which suggests a role for
subfunctionalization in coding variation affecting duplicated genes.L.P. was supported by the NIH grant R01HD073104, also L.P., A.N. and V.S. were supported by
R21HD81675, M.H. and E.P. by P40 OD010997.2018-03-0
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Chromatin signature of widespread monoallelic expression
In mammals, numerous autosomal genes are subject to mitotically stable monoallelic expression (MAE), including genes that play critical roles in a variety of human diseases. Due to challenges posed by the clonal nature of MAE, very little is known about its regulation; in particular, no molecular features have been specifically linked to MAE. In this study, we report an approach that distinguishes MAE genes in human cells with great accuracy: a chromatin signature consisting of chromatin marks associated with active transcription (H3K36me3) and silencing (H3K27me3) simultaneously occurring in the gene body. The MAE signature is present in ∼20% of ubiquitously expressed genes and over 30% of tissue-specific genes across cell types. Notably, it is enriched among key developmental genes that have bivalent chromatin structure in pluripotent cells. Our results open a new approach to the study of MAE that is independent of polymorphisms, and suggest that MAE is linked to cell differentiation. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.01256.00
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Chromatin Signature Identifies Monoallelic Gene Expression Across Mammalian Cell Types
Monoallelic expression of autosomal genes (MAE) is a widespread epigenetic phenomenon which is poorly understood, due in part to current limitations of genome-wide approaches for assessing it. Recently, we reported that a specific histone modification signature is strongly associated with MAE and demonstrated that it can serve as a proxy of MAE in human lymphoblastoid cells. Here, we use murine cells to establish that this chromatin signature is conserved between mouse and human and is associated with MAE in multiple cell types. Our analyses reveal extensive conservation in the identity of MAE genes between the two species. By analyzing MAE chromatin signature in a large number of cell and tissue types, we show that it remains consistent during terminal cell differentiation and is predominant among cell-type specific genes, suggesting a link between MAE and specification of cell identity
Identification of a targetable KRAS-mutant epithelial population in non-small cell lung cancer
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer deaths. Tumor heterogeneity, which hampers development of targeted therapies, was herein deconvoluted via single cell RNA sequencingin aggressive human adenocarcinomas (carrying Kras-mutations) and comparable murine model. We identified a tumor-specific, mutant-KRAS-associated subpopulation which is conserved in both human and murine lung cancer. We previously reported a key role for the oncogene BMI-1 in adenocarcinomas. We therefore investigated the effects of in vivo PTC596 treatment, which affects BMI-1 activity, in our murine model. Post-treatment, MRI analysis showed decreased tumor size, while single cell transcriptomics concomitantly detected near complete ablation of the mutant-KRAS-associated subpopulation, signifying the presence of a pharmacologically targetable, tumor-associated subpopulation. Our findings therefore hold promise for the development of a targeted therapy for KRAS-mutant adenocarcinomas
Tree-Adjoining Grammars for Optimality Theory Syntax
This paper explores an optimality-theoretic approach to syntax based on Tree-Adjoining Grammars (TAG), where two separate optimizations are responsible for the construction of local pieces of tree structure (elementary trees) and the combination of these pieces of structure. The local optimization takes a non-recursive predicate-argument structure (PA-chunk) as an underlying representation and chooses the best tree structure realizing it. The linking optimization takes as an underlying representation a tree whose nodes are labeled by PA-chunks and chooses among a set of structurally isomorphic TAG derivation trees. We provide formal definitions of the OTAG system and prove equivalence in strong generative capacity between OTAG and TAG