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Full-Text Articles in Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology

Defining The Role Of Rare Genetic Variants That Drive Risk And Pathogenesis Of Alzheimer’S Disease, Matthew James Rosene May 2022

Defining The Role Of Rare Genetic Variants That Drive Risk And Pathogenesis Of Alzheimer’S Disease, Matthew James Rosene

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the leading cause of dementia and is pathologically defined by the aggregation of extracellular amyloid plaques and intracellular neurofibrillary tangles. Rare heritable mutations within the genes for amyloid precursor protein (APP) and presenilin 1 (PSEN1), and presenilin 2 (PSEN2) cause early onset AD and account for approximately 1% of AD cases. While the majority of AD cases are late-onset (LOAD), which is defined by a markedly more complex genetic architecture that is comprised of many genetic risk factors that influence AD through multiple cellular pathways. The advent of deep sequencing analyses have allowed for the identification …


C. Elegans Response To Cadmium Toxicity, Brian James Earley Aug 2021

C. Elegans Response To Cadmium Toxicity, Brian James Earley

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Cadmium is an environmental pollutant and significant health hazard that is similar to the physiological metal zinc. Residing in the same group of the periodic table, cadmium and zinc share chemical characteristics that are important for their industrial uses in electroplating, batteries, pigments, and metal alloys. The similarities of ionic cadmium and zinc have significant repercussions on biological systems. While it has long been clear that cadmium is toxic to biological systems, the mechanisms of cadmium toxicity remain poorly understood. In contrast, mechanisms of zinc homeostasis have been elucidated in growing detail. In C. elegans high zinc homeostasis is regulated …


The Role Of Subclonal Gene Mutations During Progression From Myelodysplastic Syndrome To Secondary Acute Myeloid Leukemia, Andrew John Menssen May 2021

The Role Of Subclonal Gene Mutations During Progression From Myelodysplastic Syndrome To Secondary Acute Myeloid Leukemia, Andrew John Menssen

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) are a heterogeneous group of clonal bone marrow disorders characterized by ineffective hematopoiesis. Approximately 30% of MDS patients progress to secondary acute myeloid leukemia (AML). MDS is caused by somatic mutations in hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells and progression to secondary AML is associated with the acquisition and/or expansion of at least one subclone. We hypothesized that specific gene mutations would be enriched in subclones compared to founding clones, and that the order of mutation acquisition would be critical for clonal evolution and progression from MDS to secondary AML. Sequencing of paired MDS and secondary AML samples from 44 …


Single-Cell Resolution Mechanistic Analyses Of Direct Lineage Reprogramming, Chuner Guo May 2021

Single-Cell Resolution Mechanistic Analyses Of Direct Lineage Reprogramming, Chuner Guo

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

End-stage organ failures remain a clinical challenge with an unmet need for medical therapies, with transplantation often being the only curative option. Despite advances in transplantation outcomes, organ shortage continues to limit the availability of cures to patients in need. The direct lineage reprogramming of one cell type to another is a promising avenue for therapy with the following advantages: (1) patient-specific cell sources, (2) direct conversion without reverting to pluripotency and the associated risk of teratoma formation, and (3) utilization of the cell type responsible for fibrotic scar formation for the engineering towards the desired cell fate. Nonetheless, many …


Engineering Natural Competence Into The Fast-Growing Cyanobacterium Synechococcus Elongatus Utex 2973, Kristen Elizabeth Wendt Aug 2020

Engineering Natural Competence Into The Fast-Growing Cyanobacterium Synechococcus Elongatus Utex 2973, Kristen Elizabeth Wendt

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Synechococcus elongatus UTEX 2973 is the fastest growing cyanobacterium discovered to date. Using water, carbon dioxide, and light alone, this organism can double in 1.5 hours under optimal conditions. The accelerated doubling exhibited by Synechococcus 2973 makes it a prime candidate to serve as a model photoautotrophic system. However, Synechococcus 2973 lacks one highly desirable feature: it cannot undergo natural transformation. This thesis seeks to engineer this capacity into this fast-growing system in order to create an organism that is both fast growing and naturally competent. Synechococcus 2973 is a unique platform because it is >99% genetically identical to another …


Dendritic Cell Development And Function, Vivek Durai May 2020

Dendritic Cell Development And Function, Vivek Durai

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Dendritic cells (DCs) are a group of immune cells that include both classical dendritic cells (cDCs) and plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs). cDCs are further comprised of two distinct subsets, cDC1s and cDC2s, which play critical roles in the initiation of innate and adaptive immune responses. Understanding how these lineages develop and function is therefore paramount. All DCs require the receptor tyrosine kinase Flt3 and its ligand Flt3L for their development, but the loss of Flt3L in mice leads to a more severe DC deficiency than does the loss of Flt3. This has led to speculation that Flt3L can bind to …


Activation And Regulation Of The Alkbh3-Ascc Alkylation Repair Pathway, Josh Brickner Dec 2019

Activation And Regulation Of The Alkbh3-Ascc Alkylation Repair Pathway, Josh Brickner

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

DNA repair is essential to prevent the cytotoxic or mutagenic effects of various types of DNA lesions. These lesions are sensed by distinct pathways to recruit repair factors specific to type of damage. In particular, the ALKBH family of proteins recognizes and repairs specific alkylated lesions, including 1-methyladenine (m1A) and 3-methylcytosine (m3C). A major outstanding question in the field is how the AlkB homologue ALKBH3 and its associated protein partners are recruited to sites of alkylation damage and how this repair activity is regulated. Understanding the upstream signaling events that mediate recognition and repair of DNA alkylation damage is particularly …


A Noncanonical Function Of The Telomerase Rna Component In Human Embryonic Stem Cells, Kirsten Ann Brenner Dec 2019

A Noncanonical Function Of The Telomerase Rna Component In Human Embryonic Stem Cells, Kirsten Ann Brenner

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Telomeres are stretches of TTAGGG nucleotide repeats located at the ends of linear chromosomes that shorten with progressive cell division and prevent genomic instability at the cost of limiting a cell’s capacity to proliferate. This limitation can be overcome by telomerase, a ribonucleoprotein complex that elongates telomeres via reverse-transcription of the template telomerase RNA component (TERC). Recent studies have reported potential functions of TERC outside of its role in telomere maintenance. These noncanonical functions of TERC are however poorly defined, and the molecular mechanisms and biological relevance behind such functions remain elusive. Here, we generated conditional TERC knock-out human embryonic …


Elucidating Enhancer Function In Epidermal Development And Filaggrin Loss-Of-Function Variants In African American Atopic Dermatitis, Mary Elizabeth Mathyer Dec 2019

Elucidating Enhancer Function In Epidermal Development And Filaggrin Loss-Of-Function Variants In African American Atopic Dermatitis, Mary Elizabeth Mathyer

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

The epidermis is the outermost tissue of the skin and provides the body’s first line of defense against external assaults. The epidermis is primarily composed of keratinocytes that terminally differentiate and rise apically toward the surface to form the semipermeable barrier of the skin. A hallmark of keratinocyte terminal differentiation is the expression of genes from the Epidermal Differentiation Complex (EDC) locus. Many of the EDC protein products contribute to the structural integrity of the skin barrier, evidenced by several gene knockouts such as loricrin, and even genetic variation within gene coding sequences, that modulate the integrity of the skin …


Characterization Of The Celf6 Rna Binding Protein: Effects On Mouse Vocal Behavior And Biochemical Function, Michael A. Rieger Aug 2018

Characterization Of The Celf6 Rna Binding Protein: Effects On Mouse Vocal Behavior And Biochemical Function, Michael A. Rieger

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Behavior in higher eukaryotes is a complex process which integrates signals in the environment, the genetic makeup of the organism, and connectivity in the nervous system to produce extremely diverse adaptations to the phenomenon of existence. Unraveling the subcellular components that contribute to behavioral output is important for both understanding how behavior occurs in an unperturbed state, as well as understanding how behavior changes when the underlying systems that generate it are altered. Of the numerous molecular species that make up a cell, the regulation of messenger RNAs (mRNAs), the coding template of all proteins, is of key importance to …


The Role Of Mesenchymal Stromal Cells And Classical Dendritic Cells In The Maintenance And Regulation Of The Bone Marrow Niche, Jingzhu Zhang Aug 2018

The Role Of Mesenchymal Stromal Cells And Classical Dendritic Cells In The Maintenance And Regulation Of The Bone Marrow Niche, Jingzhu Zhang

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

The bone marrow niche is an important microenvironment for the regulation of normal and malignant hematopoiesis. The first discovered niche component is mesenchymal stromal cells, which are the major source for the production and secretion of multiple niche factors. Mesenchymal stromal cells are heterogeneous and various transgenes have been used to target non-identical but overlapping subpopulations. To further characterize the heterogeneity of mesenchymal stromal cells, we tested the targeting specificity of three tissue-specific Cre-recombinase transgenes. We show that in addition to osteoblasts, Ocn-Cre targets a majority of Cxcl12-abundant reticular (CAR) cells and arteriolar pericytes. Surprisingly, Dmp1-Cre also targets a subset …


Integration Of Local And Regional Regulatory Information In The Human Genome, Hemangi Govind Chaudhari May 2018

Integration Of Local And Regional Regulatory Information In The Human Genome, Hemangi Govind Chaudhari

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Gene regulation involves the integration of different sources of information at multiple levels. The action of transcription factors is integrated at cis-regulatory sequences (CRSs). Information from many CRSs is combined to drive spatiotemporally regulated gene expression. Prediction of CRS activity from DNA sequence is challenging because most occurrences of transcription factor binding sites (TFBS) are not functional. I assayed the activity of thousands of genomic sequences with Activator Protein 1 (AP-1) binding sites in K562 cells to identify features in flanking sequences that distinguish functional from non-functional TFBS. I find that sequence features directly adjacent to the AP-1 core motif, …


Novel Approaches To Studying The Effects Of Cis-Regulatory Variants In The Central Nervous System, Susan Shen May 2018

Novel Approaches To Studying The Effects Of Cis-Regulatory Variants In The Central Nervous System, Susan Shen

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

For decades, studies of the genetic basis of disease have focused on rare coding mutations that disrupt protein function, leading to the identification of hundreds of genes underlying Mendelian diseases. However, many complex diseases are non-Mendelian, and less than 2% of the genome is coding. It is now clear that non-coding variants contribute to disease susceptibility, but the precise underlying mechanisms are generally unknown. Cis-regulatory elements (CREs) are transcription factor (TF)-bound genomic regions that regulate gene expression, and variants within CREs can therefore modify gene expression. The putative locations of CREs in a variety of cell types have been identified …


Robust Algorithms For Detecting Hidden Structure In Biological Data, Roman Sloutsky Aug 2017

Robust Algorithms For Detecting Hidden Structure In Biological Data, Roman Sloutsky

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Biological data, such as molecular abundance measurements and protein

sequences, harbor complex hidden structure that reflects its underlying

biological mechanisms. For example, high-throughput abundance measurements

provide a snapshot the global state of a living cell, while homologous

protein sequences encode the residue-level logic of the proteins' function

and provide a snapshot of the evolutionary trajectory of the protein family.

In this work I describe algorithmic approaches and analysis software I

developed for uncovering hidden structure in both kinds of data.

Clustering is an unsurpervised machine learning technique commonly used

to map the structure of data collected in high-throughput experiments,

such …


Type 1 And F17-Like Pili Promote The Establishment Of The Uropathogenic E. Coli Intestinal Reservoir, Caitlin Nicole Spaulding Aug 2017

Type 1 And F17-Like Pili Promote The Establishment Of The Uropathogenic E. Coli Intestinal Reservoir, Caitlin Nicole Spaulding

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Urinary tract infections (UTI) affect over 150 million individuals worldwide every year. These infections are associated with significant morbidity and have a sizeable economic impact, with $5 billion being spent on UTI treatment in the USA annually. Uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) are responsible for 80% of community acquired UTIs and 65% of nosocomial UTI. The current standard of care for UTI is antibiotic therapy. However, 30-50% of women experience recurrent UTI (rUTI) despite receiving antibiotic therapy. The prevalence of single and multi-drug resistant UPEC strains has led to increased reliance on carbepenems, which are primarily reserved for multi-drug resistant infections, …


Application Of Genomic Technologies To Study Infertility, Nicholas Rui Yuan Ho May 2016

Application Of Genomic Technologies To Study Infertility, Nicholas Rui Yuan Ho

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

An estimated one in eight couples in the United States are diagnosed with infertility. There is a significant genetic contribution to infertility, with estimates of heritability ranging from 0.2 to 0.5. We know surprisingly little about the genetic causes, with only slightly more than a hundred genes known to cause human infertility. I have been translating recent advances in genomics to study infertility in a more efficient manner, in order to improve our knowledge of the genetic causes. By using high throughput genomics and proteomics datasets from other groups, I was able to feed that into a machine learning algorithm …


An Active Role For The Ribosome In Determining The Fate Of Oxidized Mrna, Carrie L. Simms, Benjamin H. Hudson, John W. Mosior, Ali S. Rangwala, Hani S. Zaher Nov 2014

An Active Role For The Ribosome In Determining The Fate Of Oxidized Mrna, Carrie L. Simms, Benjamin H. Hudson, John W. Mosior, Ali S. Rangwala, Hani S. Zaher

Biology Faculty Publications & Presentations

Chemical damage to RNA affects its functional properties and thus may pose a significant hurdle to the translational apparatus; however, the effects of damaged mRNA on the speed and accuracy of the decoding process and their interplay with quality-control processes are not known. Here, we systematically explore the effects of oxidative damage on the decoding process using a well-defined bacterial in vitro translation system. We find that the oxidative lesion 8-oxoguanosine (8-oxoG) reduces the rate of peptide-bond formation by more than three orders of magnitude independent of its position within the codon. Interestingly, 8-oxoG had little effect on the fidelity …