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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

The Regulation Of The Icsp Promoter Of Shigella Flexneri By The Virulence Factor Virb, Maria Castellanos, Dustin Harrison, Helen Wing Aug 2008

The Regulation Of The Icsp Promoter Of Shigella Flexneri By The Virulence Factor Virb, Maria Castellanos, Dustin Harrison, Helen Wing

Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP)

Shigella flexneri is a pathogenic bacterium that causes severe dysentery in humans commonly known as shigellosis. Shigella encodes an outer membrane protease called IcsP. The regulation of icsP expression is under direct control of a transcriptional factor called VirB, which controls the expression of many virulence genes in Shigella. Previous work has shown through deletion analysis of the icsP promoter region that sequences as far as 1368 base pairs upstream of the transcription starting site are important for the regulation of the icsP gene by VirB. However, it is still unclear whether VirB activation requires sequences within the icsP promoter …


Construction Of A Thif Genetic Disruption In Bacillus Subtilis, Kathleen Bradley, Christine Pybus, Ronald Yasbin, Eduardo Robleto Aug 2008

Construction Of A Thif Genetic Disruption In Bacillus Subtilis, Kathleen Bradley, Christine Pybus, Ronald Yasbin, Eduardo Robleto

Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP)

The goal of our research is to determine whether the level of transcription of a gene is correlated with the level of mutation in that gene. One factor involved in the mutability of a transcribed gene is the ability of the single stranded DNA to form secondary stem loop structures (SLS), in the wake of the transcription bubble, that contain unpaired mutable bases. We are interested in correlating the levels of mutation with transcription in the thiF gene, which is predicted by bioinformatic analysis to be highly mutable. To achieve this goal, Kathleen will first construct a non-polar thiF genetic …


Investigation Of Gene And Protein Expression Based On Honey Bee (Apis Mellifera) Aging, Flight Experience, And Behavior, Azucena A. Benito, G. E. Mancinelli, A. Ammons, Michelle M. Elekonich Aug 2008

Investigation Of Gene And Protein Expression Based On Honey Bee (Apis Mellifera) Aging, Flight Experience, And Behavior, Azucena A. Benito, G. E. Mancinelli, A. Ammons, Michelle M. Elekonich

Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP)

Honeybees undergo a process of adult behavioral development, spending their first 2-3 weeks working inside the constant environment of the hive. At about 3 weeks of age workers leave the hive as foragers who gather pollen and nectar. Previous research found that bees show an enormous decline in immunity as a result of their transition from regular hive jobs to more difficult foraging activities. Foragers can be forced to go back into hive-tasks, thus becoming “reverted nurses” which may also allow a reversal of immunosenescence. Understanding how this happens could prove to be useful because if there is flexibility in …


Expression Of Thor Does Not Increase Desiccation Resistance In Drosophila Melanogaster, Robert L. Kobey, Deborah K. Hoshizaki, Allen G. Gibbs Aug 2008

Expression Of Thor Does Not Increase Desiccation Resistance In Drosophila Melanogaster, Robert L. Kobey, Deborah K. Hoshizaki, Allen G. Gibbs

Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP)

Using microarray analysis of Drosophila melanogaster, the Gibbs lab has identified several hundred candidate genes that may be involved in desiccation resistance. One of these genes is Thor, an important downstream target of the TOR/insulin signaling pathway. Preliminary results confirm that Thor plays a role in desiccation resistance. Further research will be needed to verify these results and understand the mechanism by which Thor increases desiccation resistance. This research will also serve as a proof-of-principle for testing microarray-derived hypotheses.

A previous microarray analysis found evidence that down-regulation of protein synthesis might be a cellular response to desiccation through the up-regulation …


Genomic Foundations Of Carbon Fixation In Bacteria Living In Hot Springs, Rachel K. Skinner, Brian P. Hedlund, Jeremy A. Dodsworth Aug 2008

Genomic Foundations Of Carbon Fixation In Bacteria Living In Hot Springs, Rachel K. Skinner, Brian P. Hedlund, Jeremy A. Dodsworth

Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP)

Photosynthesis does not occur above 73°C, so organisms living above this temperature must obtain useable carbon by some other mechanism. It is generally assumed that carbon is fixed by thermophiles through the process of chemolithoautotrophy; however, primary production has never been demonstrated to occur in hot springs >73°C. We have shown that two organisms, Thermocrinis and Pyrobaculum, make up more than 90% of the cells in an 80°C Great Basin hot spring, Great Boiling Spring. We hypothesize that these organisms fix carbon in the hot spring via the reverse tricarboxylic acid (rTCA) cycle. To test this hypothesis we will: i) …


Decoding The Protein Interaction Network - An Approach Integrating Biology And Math, Ryan Huang, Lingkun Gu, Qingxi J. Shen Aug 2008

Decoding The Protein Interaction Network - An Approach Integrating Biology And Math, Ryan Huang, Lingkun Gu, Qingxi J. Shen

Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP)

The WRKY super family is known to play a major role during the plant stress response and development. My project focuses on the protein-protein interaction of an Oryzasativa (rice) transcription factor, OsWRKY71 which functions as the repressor of gibberellins signaling pathway. Previous literature revealed that OsWRKY71 can interact with itself or OsWRKY51 to form dimmers by using bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC). To confirm this result, we use yeast two-hybrid system. As our data showed, OsWRKY71 seems to suppress the reporter gene expression of the conventional yeast two-hybrid system, so we use a modified yeast two-hybrid, Mating-based Split Ubiquitin System (MbSUS). …


Constructing An Argf- Strain Of Bacillus Subtilis, Allison Faucher, Christine Pybus, Ronald E. Yasbin, Eduardo A. Robleto Aug 2008

Constructing An Argf- Strain Of Bacillus Subtilis, Allison Faucher, Christine Pybus, Ronald E. Yasbin, Eduardo A. Robleto

Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP)

The goal of our research is to determine whether the level of transcription of a gene is correlated with the level of mutation in that gene. One factor involved in the mutability of a transcribed gene is the ability of the single stranded DNA to form secondary stem loop structures (SLS), in the wake of the transcription bubble, that contain unpaired mutable bases. We are interested in correlating the levels of mutation with transcription in the argF gene, which is predicted by bioinformatic analysis to be highly mutable. To achieve this goal, Allison will first construct a non-polar argF genetic …