Short fish-origin DNA elements served as flanking sequences in a knockdown cloning vector enabling the generation of a functional siRNA molecule in mammalian cells and fish embryos

2018 ◽  
Vol 505 (3) ◽  
pp. 850-857
Author(s):  
Cheng-Yung Lin ◽  
Hung-Chieh Lee ◽  
Ju-Hui Wu ◽  
Huai-Jen Tsai
1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 2149-2158 ◽  
Author(s):  
K S Hatton ◽  
V Dhar ◽  
E H Brown ◽  
M A Iqbal ◽  
S Stuart ◽  
...  

In a comprehensive study, the temporal replication of tissue-specific genes and flanking sequences was compared in nine cell lines exhibiting different tissue-specific functions. Some of the rules we have determined for the replication of these tissue specific genes include the following. (i) Actively transcribed genes usually replicate during the first quarter of the S phase. (ii) Some immunoglobulin genes replicate during the first half of S phase even when no transcriptional activity is detected but appear to replicate even earlier in cell lines where they are transcribed. (iii) Nontranscribed genes can replicate during any interval of S phase. (iv) Multigene families arranged in clusters of 250 kilobases or less define a temporal compartment comprising approximately one-quarter of S phase. While these rules, and others that are discussed, apply to the tissue-specific genes studied here, all tissue-specific genes may not follow this pattern. In addition, housekeeping genes did not follow some of these rules. These results provide the first molecular evidence that the coordinate timing of replication of contiguous sequences within a multigene family is a general property of the mammalian genome. The relationship between replication very early during S phase and the transcriptional activity within a chromosomal domain is discussed.


Author(s):  
Daisylyn Senna Tan ◽  
Yanpu Chen ◽  
Ya Gao ◽  
Anastasia Bednarz ◽  
Yuanjie Wei ◽  
...  

Abstract Transcription factor-driven cell fate engineering in pluripotency induction, transdifferentiation, and forward reprogramming requires efficiency, speed, and maturity for widespread adoption and clinical translation. Here, we used Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, and c-Myc driven pluripotency reprogramming to evaluate methods for enhancing and tailoring cell fate transitions, through directed evolution with iterative screening of pooled mutant libraries and phenotypic selection. We identified an artificially evolved and enhanced POU factor (ePOU) that substantially outperforms wild-type Oct4 in terms of reprogramming speed and efficiency. In contrast to Oct4, not only can ePOU induce pluripotency with Sox2 alone, but it can also do so in the absence of Sox2 in a three-factor ePOU/Klf4/c-Myc cocktail. Biochemical assays combined with genome-wide analyses showed that ePOU possesses a new preference to dimerize on palindromic DNA elements. Yet, the moderate capacity of Oct4 to function as a pioneer factor, its preference to bind octamer DNA and its capability to dimerize with Sox2 and Sox17 proteins remain unchanged in ePOU. Compared with Oct4, ePOU is thermodynamically stabilized and persists longer in reprogramming cells. In consequence, ePOU: 1) differentially activates several genes hitherto not implicated in reprogramming, 2) reveals an unappreciated role of thyrotropin-releasing hormone signaling, and 3) binds a distinct class of retrotransposons. Collectively, these features enable ePOU to accelerate the establishment of the pluripotency network. This demonstrates that the phenotypic selection of novel factor variants from mammalian cells with desired properties is key to advancing cell fate conversions with artificially evolved biomolecules.


2005 ◽  
Vol 388 (1) ◽  
pp. 143-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carine FILLEBEEN ◽  
Annie CALTAGIRONE ◽  
Alain MARTELLI ◽  
Jean-Marc MOULIS ◽  
Kostas PANTOPOULOS

In iron-starved cells, IRP1 (iron regulatory protein 1) binds to mRNA iron-responsive elements and controls their translation or stability. In response to increased iron levels, RNA-binding is inhibited on assembly of a cubane [4Fe-4S] cluster, which renders IRP1 to a cytosolic aconitase. Phosphorylation at conserved serine residues may also regulate the activities of IRP1. We demonstrate that Ser-711 is a phosphorylation site in HEK-293 cells (human embryonic kidney 293 cells) treated with PMA, and we study the effects of the S711E (Ser-711→Glu) mutation on IRP1 functions. A highly purified preparation of recombinant IRP1S711E displays negligible IRE-binding and aconitase activities. It appears that the first step in the aconitase reaction (conversion of citrate into the intermediate cis-aconitate) is more severely affected, as recombinant IRP1S711E retains approx. 45% of its capacity to catalyse the conversion of cis-aconitate into the end-product isocitrate. When expressed in mammalian cells, IRP1S711E completely fails to bind to RNA and to generate isocitrate from citrate. We demonstrate that the apparent inactivation of IRP1S711E is not related to mutation-associated protein misfolding or to alterations in its stability. Sequence analysis of IRP1 from all species currently deposited in protein databases shows that Ser-711 and flanking sequences are highly conserved in the evolutionary scale. Our results suggest that Ser-711 is a critical residue for the control of IRP1 activities.


RSC Advances ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (80) ◽  
pp. 65245-65254 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. V. Jain ◽  
D. Verthelyi ◽  
S. L. Beaucage

Amphipathic trans-acting phosphorothioate DNA elements deliver PNA and PMO oligomers in mammalian cells.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 1293-1301
Author(s):  
Hewei Zheng ◽  
Xueying Zhao ◽  
Hong Wang ◽  
Yu Ding ◽  
Xiaoyan Lu ◽  
...  

Abstract The recent extensive application of next-generation sequencing has led to the rapid accumulation of multiple types of data for functional DNA elements. With the advent of precision medicine, the fine-mapping of risk loci based on these elements has become of paramount importance. In this study, we obtained the human reference genome (GRCh38) and the main DNA sequence elements, including protein-coding genes, miRNAs, lncRNAs and single nucleotide polymorphism flanking sequences, from different repositories. We then realigned these elements to identify their exact locations on the genome. Overall, 5%–20% of all sequence element locations deviated among databases, on the scale of kilobase-pair to megabase-pair. These deviations even affected the selection of genome-wide association study risk-associated genes. Our results implied that the location information for functional DNA elements may deviate among public databases. Researchers should take care when using cross-database sources and should perform pilot sequence alignments before element location-based studies.


1992 ◽  
Vol 11 (13) ◽  
pp. 5063-5070 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Milot ◽  
A. Belmaaza ◽  
J.C. Wallenburg ◽  
N. Gusew ◽  
W.E. Bradley ◽  
...  

1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 2149-2158 ◽  
Author(s):  
K S Hatton ◽  
V Dhar ◽  
E H Brown ◽  
M A Iqbal ◽  
S Stuart ◽  
...  

In a comprehensive study, the temporal replication of tissue-specific genes and flanking sequences was compared in nine cell lines exhibiting different tissue-specific functions. Some of the rules we have determined for the replication of these tissue specific genes include the following. (i) Actively transcribed genes usually replicate during the first quarter of the S phase. (ii) Some immunoglobulin genes replicate during the first half of S phase even when no transcriptional activity is detected but appear to replicate even earlier in cell lines where they are transcribed. (iii) Nontranscribed genes can replicate during any interval of S phase. (iv) Multigene families arranged in clusters of 250 kilobases or less define a temporal compartment comprising approximately one-quarter of S phase. While these rules, and others that are discussed, apply to the tissue-specific genes studied here, all tissue-specific genes may not follow this pattern. In addition, housekeeping genes did not follow some of these rules. These results provide the first molecular evidence that the coordinate timing of replication of contiguous sequences within a multigene family is a general property of the mammalian genome. The relationship between replication very early during S phase and the transcriptional activity within a chromosomal domain is discussed.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huiya Gu ◽  
Hannah Harris ◽  
Moshe Olshansky ◽  
Kiana Mohajeri ◽  
Yossi Eliaz ◽  
...  

Megabase-scale intervals of active, gene-rich and inactive, gene-poor chromatin are known to segregate, forming the A and B compartments. Fine mapping of the contents of these A and B compartments has been hitherto impossible, owing to the extraordinary sequencing depths required to distinguish between the long-range contact patterns of individual loci, and to the computational complexity of the associated calculations. Here, we generate the largest published in situ Hi-C map to date, spanning 33 billion contacts. We also develop a computational method, dubbed PCA of Sparse, Super Massive Matrices (POSSUMM), that is capable of efficiently calculating eigenvectors for sparse matrices with millions of rows and columns. Applying POSSUMM to our Hi-C dataset makes it possible to assign loci to the A and B compartment at 500 bp resolution. We find that loci frequently alternate between compartments as one moves along the contour of the genome, such that the median compartment interval is only 12.5 kb long. Contrary to the findings in coarse-resolution compartment profiles, we find that individual genes are not uniformly positioned in either the A compartment or the B compartment. Instead, essentially all (95%) active gene promoters localize in the A compartment, but the likelihood of localizing in the A compartment declines along the body of active genes, such that the transcriptional termini of long genes (>60 kb) tend to localize in the B compartment. Similarly, essentially all active enhancers elements (95%) localize in the A compartment, even when the flanking sequences are comprised entirely of inactive chromatin and localize in the B compartment. These results are consistent with a model in which DNA-bound regulatory complexes give rise to phase separation at the scale of individual DNA elements.


BioTechniques ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 326-332 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laetitia Daury ◽  
Didier Trouche

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