32 research outputs found

    CoCAS: a ChIP-on-chip analysis suite

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    Motivation: High-density tiling microarrays are increasingly used in combination with ChIP assays to study transcriptional regulation. To ease the analysis of the large amounts of data generated by this approach, we have developed ChIP-on-chip Analysis Suite (CoCAS), a standalone software suite which implements optimized ChIP-on-chip data normalization, improved peak detection, as well as quality control reports. Our software allows dye swap, replicate correlation and connects easily with genome browsers and other peak detection algorithms. CoCAS can readily be used on the latest generation of Agilent high-density arrays. Also, the implemented peak detection methods are suitable for other datasets, including ChIP-Seq output

    A study of transcriptional regulation and development of bioinformatic tools for high-throughput sequencing technologies

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    Les mĂ©canismes de rĂ©gulation de l’expression gĂ©nĂ©tique sont essentiels pour l’adaptation du comportement cellulaire face Ă  son environnement (diffĂ©renciation, dĂ©veloppement, rĂ©ponse Ă  un stimulus). Les Ă©tudes molĂ©culaires dĂ©crivent une grande diversitĂ© de facteurs impliquĂ©s dans ce phĂ©nomĂšne (TFs, marques Ă©pigĂ©nĂ©tiques, nuclĂ©osomes) et plusieurs niveaux de rĂ©gulation (initiation, Ă©longation, Ă©pissage, maturation) qui expliquent la complexitĂ© du transcriptome cellulaire. Durant ma thĂšse, nous nous sommes intĂ©ressĂ©s aux processus de rĂ©gulation de la transcription en nous appuyant sur le modĂšle de la diffĂ©renciation lymphocytaire murine. Nos Ă©tudes dĂ©crivent le recrutement des GTFs et une activitĂ© transcriptionnelle caractĂ©ristique aux promoteurs des gĂšnes et sur les enhancers. Nous montrons Ă©galement que les ilots CpG (CGIs) sont des Ă©lĂ©ments rĂ©gulateurs majeurs chez les mammifĂšres et qu’ils contribuent de maniĂšre transcription-indĂ©pendante Ă  la dĂ©plĂ©tion nuclĂ©osomale observĂ©e aux promoteurs de certains gĂšnes. Nos collaborations nous ont Ă©galement permis d’aborder des sujets relatifs Ă  l’élongation de la transcription, l’épissage alternatif, ou les combinatoires de PTMs que peuvent exhiber le CTD de l’ARN Pol II et les queues d’histones. Dans un contexte de transition de l’ùre prĂ©-gĂ©nomique vers des approches expĂ©rimentales pangĂ©nomiques (s’appuyant notamment sur les technologies de sĂ©quençage haut dĂ©bit), une proportion importante de ma pĂ©riode doctorale fut consacrĂ©e au dĂ©veloppement d’outils bioinformatiques pour le traitement et les analyses de donnĂ©es expĂ©rimentales, issues de ChIP-on-chip puis de HTS (ChIP-Seq, MNase-Seq, RNA-Seq).Mechanisms underlying the regulation of genetic expression are crucial for cell maintenance and adaptation to environment (differentiation, development...). Molecular approaches reveal a great diversity of factors involved in this process (TFs, epigenetics, nucleosomes) and several layers of regulation (transcription initiation, elongation, splicing, maturation) which contribute to the observed transcriptome complexity. During my thesis, we studied the mechanisms of transcription regulation in mammals during lymphocyte differentiation. Briefly, we described the recruitment of GTFs and the transcriptional activity occurring on promoters and enhancers. We also reveal that CpG islands (CGIs) are major regulator elements in mammals, which contribute to nucleosome depletion in a transcription-independent manner on a significant amount of promoters. Together with our collaborators, we also studied the mechanisms of transcription elongation, alternative splicing, or the complex combinatorial patterns of PTMs that can be set on the CTD of RNA Polymerase II and on histone tails. In the context of transition from pre-genomic studies to genome-wide experiments, an important part of my work consisted in the development of bioinformatics tools for the processing and analysis of experimental datasets from ChIP-on-chip, and HTS technologies (ChIP-Seq, MNase-Seq, RNA-Seq)

    Adaptation Strategies to High Hydrostatic Pressures in Pseudothermotoga species Revealed by Transcriptional Analyses

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    International audiencePseudothermotoga elfii strain DSM9442 and P. elfii subsp. lettingae strain DSM14385 are hyperthermophilic bacteria. P. elfii DSM9442 is a piezophile and was isolated from a depth of over 1600 m in an oil-producing well in Africa. P. elfii subsp. lettingae is piezotolerant and was isolated from a thermophilic bioreactor fed with methanol as the sole carbon and energy source. In this study, we analyzed both strains at the genomic and transcriptomic levels, paying particular attention to changes in response to pressure increases. Transcriptomic analyses revealed common traits of adaptation to increasing hydrostatic pressure in both strains, namely, variations in transport membrane or carbohydrate metabolism, as well as species-specific adaptations such as variations in amino acid metabolism and transport for the deep P. elfii DSM9442 strain. Notably, this work highlights the central role played by the amino acid aspartate as a key intermediate of the pressure adaptation mechanisms in the deep strain P. elfii DSM9442. Our comparative genomic and transcriptomic analysis revealed a gene cluster involved in lipid metabolism that is specific to the deep strain and that was differentially expressed at high hydrostatic pressures and might, thus, be a good candidate for a piezophilic gene marker in Pseudothermotogales
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