1,371 research outputs found

    Next-generation sequencing: applications beyond genomes.

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    The development of DNA sequencing more than 30 years ago has profoundly impacted biological research. In the last couple of years, remarkable technological innovations have emerged that allow the direct and cost-effective sequencing of complex samples at unprecedented scale and speed. These next-generation technologies make it feasible to sequence not only static genomes, but also entire transcriptomes expressed under different conditions. These and other powerful applications of next-generation sequencing are rapidly revolutionizing the way genomic studies are carried out. Below, we provide a snapshot of these exciting new approaches to understanding the properties and functions of genomes. Given that sequencing-based assays may increasingly supersede microarray-based assays, we also compare and contrast data obtained from these distinct approaches

    War Ursula Tremp die Schwester Zwinglis?

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    Identifying genes required for respiratory growth of fission yeast

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    We have used both auxotroph and prototroph versions of the latest deletion-mutant library to identify genes required for respiratory growth on solid glycerol medium in fission yeast. This data set complements and enhances our recent study on functional and regulatory aspects of energy metabolism by providing additional proteins that are involved in respiration. Most proteins identified in this mutant screen have not been implicated in respiration in budding yeast. We also provide a protocol to generate a prototrophic mutant library, and data on technical and biological reproducibility of colony-based high-throughput screens

    Avant-propos

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    Abstrac

    Fission yeast SWI/SNF and RSC complexes show compositional and functional differences from budding yeast.

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    SWI/SNF chromatin-remodeling complexes have crucial roles in transcription and other chromatin-related processes. The analysis of the two members of this class in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, SWI/SNF and RSC, has heavily contributed to our understanding of these complexes. To understand the in vivo functions of SWI/SNF and RSC in an evolutionarily distant organism, we have characterized these complexes in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Although core components are conserved between the two yeasts, the compositions of S. pombe SWI/SNF and RSC differ from their S. cerevisiae counterparts and in some ways are more similar to metazoan complexes. Furthermore, several of the conserved proteins, including actin-like proteins, are markedly different between the two yeasts with respect to their requirement for viability. Finally, phenotypic and microarray analyses identified widespread requirements for SWI/SNF and RSC on transcription including strong evidence that SWI/SNF directly represses iron-transport genes

    Enseigner la musique dans le deuxiÚme cycle en tant que généralistes: Quels sont les facteurs qui influencent les enseignants généralistes du cycle 2 à s'investir ou non dans l'enseignement de la musique ?

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    Ce mĂ©moire traitera de l’enseignement de la musique dispensĂ© par des enseignants gĂ©nĂ©ralistes au deuxiĂšme cycle de l’école primaire. Il Ă©voquera les diffĂ©rents facteurs qui les encouragent ou les dĂ©couragent Ă  s’investir dans cette tĂąche. Nous en apprendrons davantage sur la formation musicale de la HEP-BEJUNE de Porrentruy en nous concentrant notamment sur les contenus des cours, mais aussi sur les diffĂ©rentes mĂ©thodes existantes en lien avec les attentes fondamentales du PER pour l’enseignement de la discipline Musique. En d’autres termes, ce travail portera sur ce que la musique gĂ©nĂšre en nous (Ă©motions, sensations, etc.) et sur son enseignement ne laissant ni les Ă©lĂšves ni les enseignants indiffĂ©rents. La place de la musique Ă  l’école peut paraĂźtre peu attrayante pour certains. Ce mĂ©moire tentera donc de donner des pistes pour revaloriser l’enseignement de la musique auprĂšs des gĂ©nĂ©ralistes, en leur montrant que la discipline n’est pas sans intĂ©rĂȘt et difficile Ă  assumer

    Co-Expression Network Models Suggest that Stress Increases Tolerance to Mutations

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    Network models are a well established tool for studying the robustness of complex systems, including modelling the effect of loss of function mutations in protein interaction networks. Past work has concentrated on average damage caused by random node removal, with little attention to the shape of the damage distribution. In this work, we use fission yeast co-expression networks before and after exposure to stress to model the effect of stress on mutational robustness. We find that exposure to stress decreases the average damage from node removal, suggesting stress induces greater tolerance to loss of function mutations. The shape of the damage distribution is also changed upon stress, with a greater incidence of extreme damage after exposure to stress. We demonstrate that the change in shape of the damage distribution can have considerable functional consequences, highlighting the need to consider the damage distribution in addition to average behaviour

    High-Throughput, High-Precision Colony Phenotyping with Pyphe

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    Colony fitness screens are powerful approaches for functional genomics and genetics. This protocol describes experimental and computational procedures for assaying the fitness of thousands of microbial strains in numerous conditions in parallel. Data analysis is based on pyphe, an all-in-one bioinformatics toolbox for scanning, image analysis, data normalization, and interpretation. We describe a standard protocol where endpoint colony areas are used as fitness proxy and two variations on this, one using colony growth curves and one using colony viability staining with phloxine B. Different strategies for experimental design, normalization and quality control are discussed. Using these approaches, it is possible to collect hundreds of thousands of data points, with low technical noise levels around 5%, in an experiment typically lasting 2 weeks or less

    Shaken not stirred: a global research cocktail served in Hinxton

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    A report of the 2007 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory/Wellcome Trust Conference on Functional Genomics and Systems Biology, Hinxton, UK, 10-13 October 2007
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