1 / 32

TTh  11:00-12:15 in Clark S361 Profs: Serafim Batzoglou, Gill Bejerano

TTh  11:00-12:15 in Clark S361 Profs: Serafim Batzoglou, Gill Bejerano TAs: George Asimenos, Cory McLean. Lecture 14. Co-option: Case study to Survey Course Project. Genomic Distribution of Ultraconserved Elements. exonic non possibly. Origins?. Looks Like A Novel Coelacanth Repeat.

hue
Download Presentation

TTh  11:00-12:15 in Clark S361 Profs: Serafim Batzoglou, Gill Bejerano

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. TTh  11:00-12:15 in Clark S361 Profs: Serafim Batzoglou, Gill Bejerano TAs: George Asimenos, Cory McLean http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  2. Lecture 14 • Co-option: Case study to Survey • Course Project http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  3. Genomic Distribution of Ultraconserved Elements • exonic • non • possibly Origins? http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  4. Looks Like A Novel Coelacanth Repeat http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  5. Uniquely Abundant in Coelacanth Upto 80%id between Coelacanth instances and some human instances, inc uc.338. ? x 100 diverged copies in a Gigabase 60 highly similar copies in a Megabase http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  6. Repeats / obile Elements ("selfish DNA") Human Genome: 3*109 letters 1.5% known function >50% junk http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  7. The LF SINE (for Lobefin Fish / “Living Fossil”) not similar to any known repeat out back Reconstruction target site duplications http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  8. >360My Old and Going Strong Upto 80%id between Coelacanth SINE and some human instances, inc uc.338. D ? B x http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  9. Cis-reg & Ultra elements from obile Elements Co-option event, probably due to favorable genomic context All other copies are destined to decay over time at a neutral rate [Yass is a small town in New South Wales, Australia.] http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07] [Bejerano et al., Nature 2006]

  10. Exapted Into Which Cellular Roles? No evidence for Transcription (Tx) as small RNAs, no orientation preference in introns, not in antisense Tx. ? Human instances cluster together, found <1Mb from 35 TFs (P<3*10-6). x http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  11. Instance 500kb Downstream of ISL1 1Mb ISL1 is a neuro-developmental gene, also expressed in testis. Three previously known enhancers are conserved across vertebrates. http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  12. Repeat made Regulatory Region in situ Conserved Element Minimal Promoter Reporter Gene transgenic http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  13. Co-option into Different Roles protein coding repeat generegulating http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  14. Age old Hypothesis: Repeat to Rewire! [Davidson & Erwin, 2006] [Britten & Davidson, 1971] http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  15. Elsewhere… Screened repeat copies found in all annotated human promoters for many TF binding site matrices Found many enrichments: … … [Thornburg et al., Gene, 2006] http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  16. ? x The Co-Optionome quantify co-option transposition event functionalelements ? LF-SINE, DeuSINE, MER121, … [Lowe, Bejerano & Haussler, PNAS, 2007] http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  17. Computationally Driven Biology Simplified hypothesis generalize survey case study set BIO CS analyze experiment candidates http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  18. ? x How to Generalize? http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  19. In Search of the Co Optionome [%age of H.G] repetitive conserved 5% 50% 1.5% 20% >100Mya highly conserved non-coding (think functional, regulatory) >100Mya mobile element instances 10,000 elements! 1Mb, 0.04% H.G 50-489bp, avg 100bp http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  20. Specimen ZFPM2: Zinc Finger TF, Regulator of GATA TFs. Alus http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  21. Co-options are from all Repeat Classes 1Mb http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  22. Co-options correlate with gene deserts genome wide http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  23. Co-options show clear functional preferences • GO term enrichment for nearest gene to co-opted element: • 10-75 Development (and system devel, nervous sys devel, etc) • 10-72 Transcription Regulator Activity (and related terms) • 10-23 Cell Recognition (neuron recog, tyros kinas sign, cell adhesion, etc) Densest co-option “clouds” in the human genome: http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  24. Britten & Davidson redux [Britten & Davidson, 1971] http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  25. Example: The reelin pathway involved in neuronal development and function. En-1 binding sites. Similar phenomenon for Oct-1 (Pou2f1), SRY, v-Myb and YY1. http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  26. Particular Repeat Portions More Prone To Co-option all instances exapted instances only http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  27. Compare to exonization all instances exapted instances only required for repeat life cycle in exonization: 3’ 5’ polyA 3’ 5’ polyT http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  28. Compare to exonization all instances exapted instances only required for repeat life cycle in exonization: 3’ found in most alt-splice exons 5’ polyA 3’ 5’ polyT http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  29. A Significant Minority of Putative Cis-Reg At least 7.5% of conserved non coding born after opposum split originate in exaptation (0.3% of all repeat instances born in this time period) http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  30. Inconclusive Evidence • “Clouds” of exaptation around genes sometimes have many instances of same type, sometimes one of each, sometimes some random mix in between. • The most frequently co-opted portions of a repeat are no more enriched for GO terms or annotated pathways than the set of all co-options of that mobile element. • Sequence-similar (sub) families of co-options are not more enriched for GO terms or pathways either. http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  31. Summary • Co-option of interspersed repeats into regulatory roles • appears to be a force of nature to be reckoned with. • Some open questions: • What functions do repeats co-opt into? • How are they pre-disposed to take these on? • Prove Brittten & Davidson: Have they really contributed • significantly/triggered the formation of any gene circuitry? • (enticing to think about clade specific traits: placenta, brain, …) • Some Implications: • microarray experiments, eg, ChIP-chip • functional dissections of loci • computational analysis & modeling of cis-reg network http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

  32. discuss projects http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Spr06/07]

More Related