24,639 research outputs found
Genome-wide analysis of splicing related genes and alternative splicing in plants
The phenomenon of pre-mRNA splicing in eukaryotes has been mostly studied in mammalian and yeast systems. The splicing machinery in plants is thought to be largely conserved relative to animal and fungal organisms. This thesis encompasses systematic studies of splicing-related genes and alternative splicing (AS) in plants. A total of 74 snRNA genes and 395 genes encoding splicing related proteins were identified in Arabidopsis, including the previously elusive U4atac snRNA gene. About 50% of the splicing related genes are duplicated in plants. The duplication ratios for splicing regulators are even higher, indicating that the splicing mechanism is generally conserved among plants, but that the regulation of splicing may be more variable and flexible.;Over 30% of the splicing related genes can be alternatively spliced. Overall, both Arabidopsis and rice have about 22% of the expressed genes being alternatively spliced, and both have about 55% AS events to be intron retention (IntronR). The consistent high frequency of IntronR suggests prevalence of splice site recognition by intron definition in plants. 40% of Arabidopsis AS genes are also alternatively spliced in rice, with some examples strongly suggesting a role of the AS event as an evolutionary conserved mechanism of post-transcriptional regulation.;U2AF is an essential splicing factor in animals. The two copies of Arabidopsis U2AF1 (AUSa and AUSb) were experimentally characterized as a case study. AUSa expressed at a higher level than AUSb in most tissues. Altered expression levels of AUSa or AUSb cause pleiotropic phenotypes and splicing pattern changes for some pre-mRNA, indicating the importance of AUSa/b for correct splice site recognition. A novel C-terminal domain (SERE) is highly conserved in all seed plant U2AF1 homologs, suggesting its important function specific to higher plants.;All together, similarities as well as differences were revealed between the splicing mechanisms in plants and mammalians, demonstrating that organisms have evolved special mechanisms to ensure the efficient and accurate splicing in different environments. Two databases (Arabidopsis Splicing Related Genes (ASRG), http://www.plantgdb.org/SRGD/ASRG/, and Alternative Splicing in Plants (ASIP), http://www.plantgdb.org/ASIP/) were constructed for the community to use and will facilitate studies of plant splicing mechanisms
Boundary Value Problem for (III): Global Solution and Asymptotics
Based on the results in the previous papers that the boundary value problem
with the condition for
has a unique solution , and satisfies
, in this paper we show that ,
with the initial conditions has a unique solution by
using functional analysis method. So we get a globally well defined bounded
function . The asymptotics of as and as are obtained, and the connection formulas for
the parameters in the asymptotics and the numerical simulations are also given.
Then by the properties of , the solution to the boundary value problem
is well described by the asymptotics
and the connection formulas.Comment: 11 pages, 2 fingure
Boundary Value Problem for (I): Existence and Uniqueness
In this paper we study the equation with the
boundary conditions , and for .
The existence of the solution is proved by using topological shooting argument.
And the uniqueness is proved by variation method. Using the asymptotics of
as , in the following papers we will discuss the global
solution for , and give explicit asymptotics of as
and as , and the connection formulas for the parameters in the
asymptotics. Based on these results, we will solve the boundary value problem
, , which is the goal of this work. Once people discuss
the regular solution of this equation, this boundary value problem must be
considered.
This problem is useful to study the Yang-Mills potential related equations,
and the method used for this equation is applicible to other similar equations.Comment: 12 page
- β¦