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  • Journals
  • Articles  (26)
  • Virology  (16)
  • RNA characterisation and manipulation  (10)
  • Oxford University Press  (26)
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  • 2015-2019  (26)
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  • Biology  (26)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2015-09-19
    Description: Telomerase is a reverse transcriptase that maintains telomeres on the ends of chromosomes, allowing rapidly dividing cells to proliferate while avoiding senescence and apoptosis. Understanding telomerase gene expression and splicing at the single cell level could yield insights into the roles of telomerase during normal cell growth as well as cancer development. Here we use droplet-based single cell culture followed by single cell or colony transcript abundance analysis to investigate the relationship between cell growth and transcript abundance of the telomerase genes encoding the RNA component (hTR) and protein component (hTERT) as well as hTERT splicing. Jurkat and K562 cells were examined under normal cell culture conditions and during exposure to curcumin, a natural compound with anti-carcinogenic and telomerase activity-reducing properties. Individual cells predominantly express single hTERT splice variants, with the α+/β– variant exhibiting significant transcript abundance bimodality that is sustained through cell division. Sub-lethal curcumin exposure results in reduced bimodality of all hTERT splice variants and significant upregulation of alpha splicing, suggesting a possible role in cellular stress response. The single cell culture and transcript abundance analysis method presented here provides the tools necessary for multiparameter single cell analysis which will be critical for understanding phenotypes of heterogeneous cell populations, disease cell populations and their drug response.
    Keywords: RNA characterisation and manipulation
    Print ISSN: 0305-1048
    Electronic ISSN: 1362-4962
    Topics: Biology
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2015-08-29
    Description: Small RNAs, between 18nt and 30nt in length, are a diverse class of non-coding RNAs that mediate a range of cellular processes, from gene regulation to pathogen defense. They guide ribonucleoprotein complexes to their target nucleic acids by Watson–Crick base pairing. We report here that current techniques for small RNA detection and library generation are biased by formation of RNA duplexes. To address this problem, we established FDF-PAGE (fully-denaturing formaldehyde polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis) to prevent annealing of sRNAs to their complement. By applying FDF-PAGE, we provide evidence that both strands of viral small RNA are present in near equimolar ratios, indicating that the predominant precursor is a long double-stranded RNA. Comparing non-denaturing conditions to FDF-PAGE uncovered extensive sequestration of miRNAs in model organisms and allowed us to identify candidate small RNAs under the control of competing endogenous RNAs (ceRNAs). By revealing the full repertoire of small RNAs, we can begin to create a better understanding of small RNA mediated interactions.
    Keywords: RNA characterisation and manipulation
    Print ISSN: 0305-1048
    Electronic ISSN: 1362-4962
    Topics: Biology
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2016-07-24
    Description: We have recently reported the active Helicobacter pylori bacteriophages (phages), KHP30 and KHP40, the genomic DNAs of which exist as episomes in host bacterial strains isolated in Japan (i.e. pseudolysogeny). In this study, we examined the possibility of the lysogeny of active KHP30-like phages in Japanese H. pylori strains, because their genomes contain a putative integrase gene. Only the NY40 strain yielded partial detection of a KHP30-like prophage sequence in PCR among 174 Japanese H. pylori isolates, except for strains producing the above active phages. Next, according to the genomic analysis of the NY40 strain, the KHP30-like prophage sequence was found to be located from ca. 524 to 549 kb in the host chromosome. The attachment sites, attL and attR , in the NY40 genome showed almost the same genomic location and sequence as those detected in a French isolate B38, suggesting that an active parental KHP30-like phage had integrated into the ancestral NY40 genome in a site-specific manner. The prophage found in the NY40 genome was assumed to have been genetically modified, after site-specific integration. These, together with the data in the KHP30-like prophages of other H. pylori genomes, suggest that the lysogenic state of the KHP30-like phages is generally unstable.
    Keywords: Virology
    Print ISSN: 0378-1097
    Electronic ISSN: 1574-6968
    Topics: Biology
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
    Description: Vitamin C is known to inhibit mycobacterial growth by acting as a hypoxia inducing agent. While investigating how mycobacteriophage growth is influenced by hypoxic conditions induced by vitamin C, using Mycobacterium smegmatis - mycobacteriophage D29 as a model system, it was observed that prior exposure of the host to such conditions resulted in increased burst size of the phage. Vitamin C pre-exposure was also found to induce synchronous growth of the host. A mutant defective in DevR, the response regulator that controls hypoxic responses in mycobacteria, neither supported higher phage bursts nor was it able to undergo synchronized growth following vitamin C pre-exposure, indicating thereby that the two phenomena are interrelated. Further evidence supporting such an interrelationship was obtained from the observation that phage burst sizes varied depending on the stage of synchronous growth that the host cells were in, at the time of infection—higher bursts were observed in the resting/synthetic phases and lower in the dividing ones. The effects were specific in nature as synchronization by an unrelated method, known as ‘crowding’, did not lead to the same consequence. The results indicate that growth synchronization induced by vitamin C treatment is a DevR-dependent phenomenon which is exploited by mycobacteriophage D29 to grow in larger numbers.
    Keywords: Virology
    Print ISSN: 0378-1097
    Electronic ISSN: 1574-6968
    Topics: Biology
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2016-03-05
    Description: Single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) phages are profoundly different from tailed phages in many aspects including the nature and size of their genome, virion size and morphology, mutation rate, involvement in horizontal gene transfer, infection dynamics and cell lysis mechanisms. Despite the importance of ssDNA phages as molecular biology tools and model systems, the environmental distribution and ecological roles of these phages have been largely unexplored. Viral metagenomics and other culture-independent viral diversity studies have recently challenged the perspective of tailed, double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) phages, dominance by demonstrating the prevalence of ssDNA phages in diverse habitats. However, the differences between ssDNA and dsDNA phages also substantially limit the efficacy of simultaneously assessing the abundance and diversity of these two phage groups. Here we provide an overview of the major differences between ssDNA and tailed dsDNA phages that may influence their effects on bacterial communities. Furthermore, through the analysis of 181 published metaviromes we demonstrate the environmental distribution of ssDNA phages and present an analysis of the methodological biases that distort their study through metagenomics.
    Keywords: Virology
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2016-03-09
    Description: Bacteriophage ZF40 is the only currently available, temperate Myoviridae phage infecting the potato pathogen Pectobacterium carotovorum subsp . carotovorum . Despite its unusual tail morphology, its major tail sheath and tube proteins remained uncharacterized after the initial genome annotation. Using ESI tandem mass-spectrometry, 24 structural proteins of the ZF40 virion were identified, with a sequence coverage ranging between 15.8% and 87.8%. The putative function of 16 proteins could be elucidated based on secondary structure analysis and conservative domain searches. The experimental annotation of 35% of the encoded gene products within the structural region of the genome represents a complete view of the virion structure, which can serve as the basis for future structural analysis as a model phage.
    Keywords: Virology
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2015-06-24
    Description: RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq) is a powerful tool for analyzing the identity of cellular RNAs but is often limited by the amount of material available for analysis. In spite of extensive efforts employing existing protocols, we observed that it was not possible to obtain useful sequencing libraries from nuclear RNA derived from cultured human cells after crosslinking and immunoprecipitation (CLIP). Here, we report a method for obtaining strand-specific small RNA libraries for RNA sequencing that requires picograms of RNA. We employ an intramolecular circularization step that increases the efficiency of library preparation and avoids the need for intermolecular ligations of adaptor sequences. Other key features include random priming for full-length cDNA synthesis and gel-free library purification. Using our method, we generated CLIP-Seq libraries from nuclear RNA that had been UV-crosslinked and immunoprecipitated with anti-Argonaute 2 (Ago2) antibody. Computational protocols were developed to enable analysis of raw sequencing data and we observe substantial differences between recognition by Ago2 of RNA species in the nucleus relative to the cytoplasm. This RNA self-circularization approach to RNA sequencing (RC-Seq) allows data to be obtained using small amounts of input RNA that cannot be sequenced by standard methods.
    Keywords: RNA characterisation and manipulation
    Print ISSN: 0305-1048
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    Topics: Biology
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2016-06-03
    Description: N 6 -methyladenosine (m 6 A) is a prevalent RNA methylation modification involved in the regulation of degradation, subcellular localization, splicing and local conformation changes of RNA transcripts. High-throughput experiments have demonstrated that only a small fraction of the m 6 A consensus motifs in mammalian transcriptomes are modified. Therefore, accurate identification of RNA m 6 A sites becomes emergently important. For the above purpose, here a computational predictor of mammalian m 6 A site named SRAMP is established. To depict the sequence context around m 6 A sites, SRAMP combines three random forest classifiers that exploit the positional nucleotide sequence pattern, the K-nearest neighbor information and the position-independent nucleotide pair spectrum features, respectively. SRAMP uses either genomic sequences or cDNA sequences as its input. With either kind of input sequence, SRAMP achieves competitive performance in both cross-validation tests and rigorous independent benchmarking tests. Analyses of the informative features and overrepresented rules extracted from the random forest classifiers demonstrate that nucleotide usage preferences at the distal positions, in addition to those at the proximal positions, contribute to the classification. As a public prediction server, SRAMP is freely available at http://www.cuilab.cn/sramp/ .
    Keywords: RNA characterisation and manipulation
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2015-06-24
    Description: The cyanobacterial hsp17 ribonucleicacid thermometer (RNAT) is one of the smallest naturally occurring RNAT. It forms a single hairpin with an internal 1 x 3-bulge separating the start codon in stem I from the ribosome binding site (RBS) in stem II. We investigated the temperature-dependent regulation of hsp17 by mapping individual base-pair stabilities from solvent exchange nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The wild-type RNAT was found to be stabilized by two critical CG base pairs (C14-G27 and C13-G28). Replacing the internal 1 x 3 bulge by a stable CG base pair in hsp17 rep significantly increased the global stability and unfolding cooperativity as evidenced by circular dichroism spectroscopy. From the NMR analysis, remote stabilization and non-nearest neighbour effects exist at the base-pair level, in particular for nucleotide G28 (five nucleotides apart from the side of mutation). Individual base-pair stabilities are coupled to the stability of the entire thermometer within both the natural and the stabilized RNATs by enthalpy–entropy compensation presumably mediated by the hydration shell. At the melting point the Gibbs energies of the individual nucleobases are equalized suggesting a consecutive zipper-type unfolding mechanism of the RBS leading to a dimmer-like function of hsp17 and switch-like regulation behaviour of hsp17 rep . The data show how minor changes in the nucleotide sequence not only offset the melting temperature but also alter the mode of temperature sensing. The cyanobacterial thermosensor demonstrates the remarkable adjustment of natural RNATs to execute precise temperature control.
    Keywords: RNA characterisation and manipulation
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2016-02-07
    Description: The adsorption of bacteriophages (phages) onto host cells is, in all but a few rare cases, a sine qua non condition for the onset of the infection process. Understanding the mechanisms involved and the factors affecting it is, thus, crucial for the investigation of host–phage interactions. This review provides a survey of the phage host receptors involved in recognition and adsorption and their interactions during attachment. Comprehension of the whole infection process, starting with the adsorption step, can enable and accelerate our understanding of phage ecology and the development of phage-based technologies. To assist in this effort, we have established an open-access resource—the Phage Receptor Database (PhReD)—to serve as a repository for information on known and newly identified phage receptors.
    Keywords: Virology
    Print ISSN: 0378-1097
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