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Full-Text Articles in Molecular Biology

Developing Regulated Crispr Systems To Control Bacterial Microbiomes, Gregory M. Pellegrino Dec 2023

Developing Regulated Crispr Systems To Control Bacterial Microbiomes, Gregory M. Pellegrino

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Changes to the human microbiome’s composition and metabolome are associated with numerous diseases and alterations to xenobiotic metabolism. As such, targeting the human microbiome is an increasingly popular option for therapeutic interventions. However, traditional therapies that target the microbiome such as antibiotics lack specificity, which can affect the beneficial species of the microbiome and cause adverse health outcomes such as the rise of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria. Therefore, the research and development of specific, targeted antimicrobial therapies is crucial to effectively treating microbiome dysbioses.
CRISPR and CRISPRi provide easily modifiable, RNA-guided mechanisms mediated by the Cas9 or dCas9 enzymes to induce sequence-specific …


The Effects Of Resistance Exercise Training On Insulin Resistance Development In Female Rodents With Type 1 Diabetes, Mitchell James Sammut Aug 2023

The Effects Of Resistance Exercise Training On Insulin Resistance Development In Female Rodents With Type 1 Diabetes, Mitchell James Sammut

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

The etiology of insulin resistance (IR) development in type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) remains unclear; however, impaired skeletal muscle metabolism may play a role. While IR development has been established in male T1DM rodents, female rodents have yet to be examined in this context. Resistance exercise training (RT) has been shown to improve IR and is associated with a lower risk of hypoglycemia onset in T1DM compared to aerobic exercise. Additionally, the molecular mechanisms mediating RT-induced improvements in insulin sensitivity remain unclear. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of RT on IR development in female …


Advances In Phaeodactylum Tricornutum Nuclear Engineering, Mark Pampuch Jul 2023

Advances In Phaeodactylum Tricornutum Nuclear Engineering, Mark Pampuch

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

The marine diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum has the potential to become an excellent platform for the sustainable production of valuable compounds and pharmaceuticals, but currently large-scale engineering of this organism remains a challenge due factors like inefficient genetic transformation protocols and a lack of accurate genomic data. This thesis addresses these two bottlenecks by (i) optimizing an electroporation protocol to P. tricornutum and (ii) remapping genomic data from a scaffolded genome assembly to a telomere-to-telomere genome assembly. An optimized transformation protocol was developed that could consistently transform blunt-ended and DNA with overhangs and yielded up to 1000+ colony forming units per …


Functionalizing Conjugative Systems To Deliver Crispr Nucleases For Targeted Bacterial Killing, Thomas A. Hamilton Jul 2023

Functionalizing Conjugative Systems To Deliver Crispr Nucleases For Targeted Bacterial Killing, Thomas A. Hamilton

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

The interactions between humans and microbes are intimately important to human health, with both commensal and pathogenic bacteria affecting homeostasis and disease. Increasing concern over antibiotic resistance in bacterial pathogens represents a significant threat to human health, and use of traditional antibiotics to treat infections can be detrimental to commensal bacteria as well as pathogens, demonstrating a need for more specific antibacterial reagents. RNA-guided CRISPR nucleases, which can target and cleave genomes of interest, are a potential tool for specific bacterial targeting. A key limitation to the use of CRISPR antimicrobials is effective and robust delivery to the target bacteria. …


Perseverance Of Protein Homeostasis Despite Mistranslation, Farah Hasan Aug 2022

Perseverance Of Protein Homeostasis Despite Mistranslation, Farah Hasan

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Transfer RNAs (tRNAs) are essential for protein synthesis and translation fidelity. Some human tRNA variants may cause amino acid misincorporation: tRNAGly variants (tRNAGlyCCC, tRNAGlyGCC) have mutations that generate an alanine tRNA identity element (G3:U70), likely causing mis-aminoacylation of glycine tRNAs with alanine, while the tRNAAlaAGC G35C (tRNAAlaACC) variant may function similarly to mis-incorporate Ala at Gly codons by generating a Gly anticodon. I propose that these mistranslating tRNAs will disrupt protein homeostasis in mammalian cells. Although the tRNAGly and tRNAAla variants did not affect protein synthesis …


Mistranslating Trnas Alter The Heat Shock Activation By Hsf1, Rebecca Dib Aug 2022

Mistranslating Trnas Alter The Heat Shock Activation By Hsf1, Rebecca Dib

Undergraduate Student Research Internships Conference

Translation, or the production of protein from an mRNA blueprint, is among the most fundamental processes to life as we know it. tRNAs are essential to accurate translation, as they decode the codons of mRNA and recruit corresponding amino acids. Variant tRNAs with anticodon mutations can decrease translational fidelity by recruiting the incorrect amino acid, an aberrant process known as mistranslation. When proteins are produced with incorrect amino acid sequences, they may misfold. The heat shock response functions to alleviate cellular stress caused by misfolded proteins, either by refolding or targeting misfolded proteins for degradation. Hsf1 acts as a transcriptional …


Illuminating Transfer Rna Variants As Genetic Modifiers In Models Of Human Disease, Jeremy T. Lant Feb 2022

Illuminating Transfer Rna Variants As Genetic Modifiers In Models Of Human Disease, Jeremy T. Lant

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Transfer RNAs (tRNAs) physically link the genetic code to an amino acid sequence, by recruiting amino acids to three-nucleotide codons in messenger RNAs. To ensure that the genetic code is translated as intended, tRNAs must be accurately aminoacylated and faithfully recognize codons in the ribosome during protein synthesis. Given the critical function of tRNAs, it has often been assumed that mutations in human tRNA genes would be either lethal to cells or not significantly impair tRNA function. My goal was to rigorously test this assumption in mammalian cell models, prompted by the recent discovery of unprecedented variation in human tRNA …


The Regulation Of Pannexin1 And Pannexin2 In The Skin In Health And Disease, Rafael E. Sanchez Pupo Aug 2021

The Regulation Of Pannexin1 And Pannexin2 In The Skin In Health And Disease, Rafael E. Sanchez Pupo

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Pannexins (PANX1, 2, 3) are a family of channel-forming glycoproteins that mediate intracellular and paracrine signaling. In contrast to PANX2, PANX1 has been extensively investigated in the skin, modulating cell differentiation, wound healing, and melanoma development. PANX1 and PANX2 can co-exist in the same cell and form mixed channels where their glycosylation seems to regulate their intermixing. N-glycosylation and caspase cleavage have been proposed as modulators of the function of PANX1, but their effects on PANX2 are unknown. We explored the PANX2 expression in mouse skin and showed that a Panx2 splice variant (PANX2-202) is continuously expressed throughout aging skin. …


Characterization And Modulatory Influence Of Pyruvate Kinase Muscle Isoforms 1 And 2 Within The Murine Pluripotent Continuum, Joshua G. Dierolf Jun 2021

Characterization And Modulatory Influence Of Pyruvate Kinase Muscle Isoforms 1 And 2 Within The Murine Pluripotent Continuum, Joshua G. Dierolf

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) and mouse epiblast stem cells (mEpiSCs) represent opposite ends of a pluripotency continuum, respectively referred to as naïve and primed pluripotent states. A third, recently discovered intermediate state has been described as the ‘formative state’. Metabolism has been traditionally regarded as a by-product of cell fate; however, recent evidence now supports metabolism as promoting stem cell fate. Pyruvate kinase muscle isoforms 1 and 2 (PKM1 and PKM2) catalyze the final, rate limiting step of glycolysis generating adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and pyruvate; however, the precise role(s) of these isozymes in naïve, formative, and primed pluripotency is …


Characterization And Discovery Of Short Linear Motifs Mediating Protein Nuclear Import, Tanner M. Tessier Mar 2021

Characterization And Discovery Of Short Linear Motifs Mediating Protein Nuclear Import, Tanner M. Tessier

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Protein-protein interactions (PPI) mediated through short linear motifs (SLiMs) are ubiquitous throughout the human proteome and are involved in many essential cellular processes. One such type of SLiM is the classical nuclear localization sequence (cNLS), which facilitates nuclear import by binding importin-α (Imp-α). This pathway is indispensable to many cellular processes and is extensively used by viral proteins that function within the nucleus of infected cells. Based on this, I demonstrated that the classical nuclear import pathway inhibitor, ivermectin, can inhibit replication of human adenovirus. Treatment with ivermectin blocks nuclear localization of the E1A protein, an essential viral nuclear protein …


Development Of A Thermosensitive Endonuclease To Act As A Plasmid Kill-Switch, Christopher D. Leichthammer Nov 2020

Development Of A Thermosensitive Endonuclease To Act As A Plasmid Kill-Switch, Christopher D. Leichthammer

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Biocontainment is an integral part of biomedical research that aims to protect the environment and human health by containing hazardous or invasive organisms in the laboratory. Containment systems often rely on elaborate genetic circuits; however, cells may escape containment by developing mutations that render the genetic circuits inviable or resistant to killing mechanisms. The aim of this thesis was to create a site-specific nuclease for biocontainment of plasmids in the mammalian gastrointestinal tract. LAGLIDADG homing endonucleases would be good candidate nucleases for a biocontainment system as they are resistant to mutations in their coding sequence and their target sequence in …


Molecular Identification And Characterization Of Viral Pathogens Infecting Sweet Cherry, Aaron J. Simkovich Oct 2020

Molecular Identification And Characterization Of Viral Pathogens Infecting Sweet Cherry, Aaron J. Simkovich

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Stone fruits are a valuable crop grown worldwide, however pathogens such as viruses threaten fruit production by reducing tree health and fruit yield. In an orchard within the Niagara region of Ontario, symptoms typical of viral infection such as chlorosis and leaf deformation were seen on sweet cherry (Prunus avium L.) trees. Next generation sequencing was performed on symptomatic and asymptomatic leaves and four viruses were identified. On the tree displaying the most severe symptoms, Prune dwarf virus (PDV), was the only virus detected. A survey conducted during this work showed 42% of cherry trees on a single …


Dnajc7, A Molecular Chaperone Protein That Modulates Protein Misfolding In Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (Als), Meaghan Kathleen Stoltz Sep 2020

Dnajc7, A Molecular Chaperone Protein That Modulates Protein Misfolding In Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (Als), Meaghan Kathleen Stoltz

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is a neurodegenerative disease associated with protein misfolding and dysregulated cellular protein quality control mechanisms. Molecular chaperones, and heat shock proteins (Hsp), are key players in maintaining cellular protein quality control. DNAJC7 is an understudied cytosolic Hsp40 that works together with Hsp70 and Hsp90 to regulate proper protein folding or degradation. Of note, mutations in the gene encoding DNAJC7 were discovered to cause familial ALS. We asked whether ALS-associated mutations in DNAJC7 compromise its function as a chaperone, which may cause the toxic accumulation of misfolded proteins. This study attempts to uncover the functions of DNAJC7 …


Thyroxine-Dependent And -Independent Effects On Premature Aging And Myelination In Atrx Mutant Mice, Megan E. Rowland Feb 2020

Thyroxine-Dependent And -Independent Effects On Premature Aging And Myelination In Atrx Mutant Mice, Megan E. Rowland

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

ATRX is an ATP-dependent chromatin remodeler required to safeguard genomic integrity. Conditional deletion of Atrx in the mouse embryonic forebrain and anterior pituitary in AtrxFoxg1Cre mice phenocopies mouse models of progeria which display increased DNA damage, coupled with reduced lifespan, growth and subcutaneous fat. These mice also have severely low circulating levels of insulin like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) and (T4) which have been reported in models of premature aging. Based on evidence that Igf1 is activated by the ligand-bound thyroid hormone receptor, I tested whether T4 supplementation could restore IGF-1 levels and ameliorate premature aging phenotypes in Atrx …


The Role Of Heat Shock Protein 90 In The Keap1/Nrf2 Mediated Oxidative-Stress Response, Zheng Song Jan 2020

The Role Of Heat Shock Protein 90 In The Keap1/Nrf2 Mediated Oxidative-Stress Response, Zheng Song

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Oxidative and proteotoxic stress are common hallmarks of Neurodegenerative diseases (NDs). Cellular proteostasis is maintained through Heat shock protein (Hsp) 90 and Stress-inducible protein 1 (STIP1) modulating the stability of their substrates (clients). Hsp90/heat shock factor (HSF)1 pathway activation attenuates proteotoxicity. Meanwhile, activating the Kelch-like ECH associated protein 1 (Keap1)/ nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2 (Nrf2) pathway combats oxidative stress. Numerous studies attempted to individually manipulate the expression of Hsp90 or Nrf2 to treat NDs.

Novel interactions of Hsp90 with Nrf2 and Keap1 were discovered via yeast-2-hybrid screening (unpublished data). We analyzed their interactions through NMR spectroscopy, ITC, protein-binding assay, …


Excess No Stabilizes The Luminal Domain Of Stim2 In A Cys-Specific Manner Thereby Regulating Basal Calcium Homeostasis And Store-Operated Calcium Entry, Matthew Novello Sep 2019

Excess No Stabilizes The Luminal Domain Of Stim2 In A Cys-Specific Manner Thereby Regulating Basal Calcium Homeostasis And Store-Operated Calcium Entry, Matthew Novello

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Stromal-interaction molecule 2 (STIM2) is an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane-inserted Ca2+-sensing protein which, together with the plasma membrane Ca2+ channel Orai1, regulates basal Ca2+ homeostasis and store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE). Recent evidence suggests that S-nitrosylation, which is the covalent attachment of a nitric oxide (NO) moiety to a cysteine thiol, can attenuate the function of the paralog STIM1 protein. Compared to STIM1, STIM2 also functions as a basal Ca2+ homeostatic feedback regulator. Therefore, the objective of my study was to evaluate the susceptibility of STIM2 to S-nitrosylation and the effects that this …


Assessing The Structure-Function Relationships Of The Apolipoprotein(A) Kringle Iv Sub-Type 10 Domain, Matthew J. Borrelli Aug 2019

Assessing The Structure-Function Relationships Of The Apolipoprotein(A) Kringle Iv Sub-Type 10 Domain, Matthew J. Borrelli

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Elevated plasma lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)) is the most prevalent heritable risk factor in the development of cardiovascular disease. The apolipoprotein(a) (apo(a)) component of Lp(a) is strongly implicated in the pathogenicity of Lp(a). It is hypothesized that the inflammatory potential of Lp(a)/apo(a) is mediated by the lysine binding ability of the apo(a) kringle IV10 (KIV10) domain, along with its covalently bound oxidized phospholipid (oxPL). Using targeted mutagenesis, two novel null alleles for the LPA gene that generate non-secretable apo(a) species have been identified, resulting from amino acid substitutions in the KIV10 domain. A potential mechanism by which KIV10 oxPL modification is enriched …


Microvascular Stenosis In Critical Limb Ischemia: Role Of Partial Endothelial To Mesenchymal Transition, Jacqueline M. Chevalier Jul 2019

Microvascular Stenosis In Critical Limb Ischemia: Role Of Partial Endothelial To Mesenchymal Transition, Jacqueline M. Chevalier

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Critical limb ischemia (CLI) is a widespread and debilitating manifestation of atherosclerosis. Unfortunately, revascularization strategies are often precluded or unsuccessful, resulting in amputation. A major reason for treatment failure is likely co-existing abnormalities in ­­the microvasculature. However, the specific microvascular defects present in end-stage PAD in humans remain unknown.

The purpose of this study was to delineate abnormalities in the microvascular wall in the critically ischemic skeletal muscle of patients with CLI.

To elucidate the microvascular landscape in CLI, we studied human tibialis anterior and gastrocnemius muscles harvested from below-knee amputations of 10 individuals with CLI. Control muscles are from …


The 2Β Insert Perturbs Folding, Stability And Hydrophobic Exposure Of Stromal Interaction Molecules, Steve Chung Oct 2018

The 2Β Insert Perturbs Folding, Stability And Hydrophobic Exposure Of Stromal Interaction Molecules, Steve Chung

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Stromal interaction molecule (STIM)1 and 2 regulate agonist-induced and basal cytosolic calcium (Ca2+) levels through oligomerization and translocation to endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-plasma membrane (PM) junctions. At these junctions, the STIM cytosolic coiled-coil domains couple to PM Orai1 protein subunits to form Ca2+ released activated Ca2+ (CRAC) channels that facilitate store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE). One splice variant of STIM2, STIM2β, contains an extra 8-residue (2β insert) located within the coiled-coils and inhibits SOCE through an unresolved mechanism, adding another layer of complexity to Ca2+ regulation in mammals. I hypothesize that the 2β insert perturbs the coiled-coil conformation and dynamics commensurate with …


Effects Of G Protein Signalling Modulator 3 On Cellular Signalling, Aneta A. Surmanski Jul 2018

Effects Of G Protein Signalling Modulator 3 On Cellular Signalling, Aneta A. Surmanski

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

G protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) promote G protein heterotrimer (Gα·GDP/Gbg) activation.GPCRsignalling is limited via G protein GTPase activity and b-arrestin-receptor interactions. G Protein Signalling Modulators (GPSMs) are proteins that may influence receptor signalling through G protein activity. GPSM3 modulates their activity by binding to Gai-GDP, limiting nucleotide exchange and preventing its re-association to Gbg. The impact of GPSM3 on signalling is unknown.We hypothesize that GPSM3 will decrease Gai-dependent signalling while promoting Gbg-dependent signalling in Gi-coupled GPCRs.

GPSM3 significantly inhibited b-arrestin recruitment to α2A-adrenergic and m-opioid receptors via a Gbg-dependent mechanism, …


Defective Aba-Mediated Sugar Signalling Pathway In An Established Arabidopsis Thaliana Cell Suspension Culture Explains Its Stay-Green Phenotype At High Sugar Concentrations, Avery Mccarthy Jun 2018

Defective Aba-Mediated Sugar Signalling Pathway In An Established Arabidopsis Thaliana Cell Suspension Culture Explains Its Stay-Green Phenotype At High Sugar Concentrations, Avery Mccarthy

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

An unusual sugar insensitive phenotype was identified in an established cell suspension culture of Arabidopsis thaliana. We characterized the physiology, biochemistry and genetics of the sugar insensitive cell culture, in order to identify factors contributing to the phenotype. Chlorophyll levels of the cell suspension culture were insensitive to high sucrose (6-15% w/v) and maintained a green phenotype. Immunoblotting indicated that levels of key photosynthetic proteins (PsaA, Lhcb2 and Rubisco) increased as a function of external sucrose concentration. The green cell culture was photosynthetically competent based on light-dependent, CO2-saturated rates of O2 evolution as well as Fv/Fm …


Characterizing The Role Of Thymine Dna Glycosylase In Transcriptional Regulation And Cancer In Vivo, Mohammad Haider Hassan Jan 2018

Characterizing The Role Of Thymine Dna Glycosylase In Transcriptional Regulation And Cancer In Vivo, Mohammad Haider Hassan

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Cytosine methylation (5mC) is essential for transcriptional control and genomic stability and is often used as a prognostic marker in cancer. Although 5mC has long been considered a relatively stable epigenetic mark, recent studies have demonstrated that it can be reversed enzymatically by TET proteins which oxidize 5mC into 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5-hmC), and then to 5-formylcytosine (5-fC) and 5-carboxylcytosine (5caC). This mechanism is known as active DNA demethylation and the base excision repair enzyme Thymine DNA Glycosylase (TDG) plays an essential role in this process by removing 5-fC and 5-caC which are subsequently replaced by the unmethylated cytosine. Importantly, homozygous loss …


An Investigation Of The Ck2-Dependent Phosphoproteome Using Inhibitor Refractory Ck2-Alpha, Edward Cruise Sep 2017

An Investigation Of The Ck2-Dependent Phosphoproteome Using Inhibitor Refractory Ck2-Alpha, Edward Cruise

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Protein kinase CK2 is a constitutively active serine/threonine kinase that is overexpressed in several human cancers, and by virtue of the vast number of putative substrates in the phosphoproteome, is implicated in the regulation of numerous cellular processes. Consequently, CK2 is an emerging therapeutic target with many CK2 inhibitors having been developed. An example of one such inhibitor is the clinical stage compound CX-4945. Although highly selective for CK2, the ATP competitive CX-4945 has demonstrated affinity for other kinases. Unique features of the catalytic pocket of CK2 have allowed for the development of inhibitor refractory mutants, which have since been …


Investigating E2f Independent Cell Cycle Control And Tumor Suppression By Prb, Michael J. Thwaites Apr 2017

Investigating E2f Independent Cell Cycle Control And Tumor Suppression By Prb, Michael J. Thwaites

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Cellular division is primarily controlled at the G1 to S-phase transition of the cell cycle by the retinoblastoma tumor-suppressor protein (pRB). The ability of pRB to restrict S-phase entry is primarily attributed to the repression of E2F transcription factors required to upregulate cell cycle target genes necessary for cellular division. Interestingly, while pRB is disrupted in the vast majority of human cancers, mutations typically target upstream regulators of pRB leading to inactivation through hyperphosphorylation. The rarity of direct pRB mutations suggests that the regulation of the cell cycle by pRB may involve additional mechanisms outside of E2F repression, as this …


Insights Into Chibby's Structural Elements And Their Interplay In Wnt Signaling Protein-Protein Interactions, Ryan C Killoran Aug 2016

Insights Into Chibby's Structural Elements And Their Interplay In Wnt Signaling Protein-Protein Interactions, Ryan C Killoran

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

The Wnt/b-catenin signaling pathway is critical to embryonic development and adult tissue homeostasis. Mutations to Wnt signaling components can cause dysregulation of the pathway, leading to various human diseases such as cancer. The partially disordered protein Chibby (Cby) is a conserved nuclear protein that acts as an antagonist in the Wnt/b-catenin signaling pathway. Cby’s antagonism is accomplished via two mechanisms. First, by competing with the Tcf/Lef family of transcription factors, Cby abrogates the b-catenin-mediated transcription of Wnt signaling genes. Moreover, upon phosphorylation on serine 20 by the kinase Akt, Cby forms a complex with the protein 14-3-3 to facilitate the …


Characterization Of Numb As A Regulator Of Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase, Ran Wei Jun 2016

Characterization Of Numb As A Regulator Of Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase, Ran Wei

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Cellular events rely on protein-protein interactions that are often mediated by modular domains which recognize particular sequence motifs in binding partners. The NUMB protein is the first described cell fate determinant and multifaceted adaptor that is involved in a wide variety of cellular events. NUMB mainly mediates protein interactions via its modular PTB domain. Here we present a systematic investigation of the NUMB-PTB interactome by employing an integrative strategy combining both protein and peptide arrays. We profiled NUMB-PTB binding specificity and interacting proteins genome-wide. The receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) are found highly enriched in the interactome, raising the possibility that …


The Role Of Thymine Dna Glycosylase (Tdg) And Dna Demethylation In Tgf Beta Signaling, Matthew E.R. Maitland Dec 2015

The Role Of Thymine Dna Glycosylase (Tdg) And Dna Demethylation In Tgf Beta Signaling, Matthew E.R. Maitland

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Prompted by findings that TGFβ stimulates thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG) dependent rapid DNA demethylation and activation of the CDKN2B gene, I investigated the global role of TDG and DNA demethylation in TGFβ signaling in HaCaT cells. Using dot blot analysis, I show that TGFβ treatment increases the global levels of 5-formylcytosine, an intermediate metabolite of active DNA demethylation. Characterization of genomic regions that undergo DNA demethylation and recruitment of TDG indicate that they are both frequent events, but only overlap at 11 genomic locations. I identified 440 TGFβ upregulated genes, 40 of which were bound by TDG and 169 that …


A Unified Framework For The Prioritization Of Variants Of Uncertain Significance In Hereditary Breast And Ovarian Cancer Patients, Natasha G. Caminsky Sep 2015

A Unified Framework For The Prioritization Of Variants Of Uncertain Significance In Hereditary Breast And Ovarian Cancer Patients, Natasha G. Caminsky

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

A significant proportion of hereditary breast and ovarian cancer (HBOC) patients receive uninformative genetic testing results, an issue exacerbated by the overwhelming quantity of variants of uncertain significance identified. This thesis describes a framework where, aside from protein coding changes, information theory (IT)-based sequence analysis identifies and prioritizes pathogenic variants occurring within sequence elements predicted to be recognized by proteins involved in mRNA splicing, transcription, and untranslated region binding and structure. To support the utilization of IT analysis, we established IT-based variant interpretation accuracy by performing a comprehensive review of mutations altering mRNA splicing in rare and common diseases.

Custom …


Analyzing A-Series Gangliosides In Neurons Following Exposure To Glutamate, Dae Hee Park Aug 2015

Analyzing A-Series Gangliosides In Neurons Following Exposure To Glutamate, Dae Hee Park

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Neurons within different brain regions have varying levels of vulnerability to external stress and therefore respond differently to injury. A potential reason to explain this may lie within a key lipid class of the cell’s plasma membrane called gangliosides. These glycosphingolipid species have been shown to play various roles in the maintenance of neuronal viability. The purpose of this study is to use electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) technique and immunohistochemistry to evaluate the temporal changes in the expression profiles of various ganglioside species during the course of neurodegeneration in rat primary cortical neurons exposed to glutamate toxicity. Primary embryonic …


Translesion Synthesis And Mutations: On The Mutagenic Properties Of The Two Dna Lesions, 8-Oxo-G And Pt-Gg, And The Functions Of Y-Family Dna Polymerases And Rev3l On The Bypass Of Each Of The Dna Lesions In Mammalian Cells, Lizhen Guo Apr 2015

Translesion Synthesis And Mutations: On The Mutagenic Properties Of The Two Dna Lesions, 8-Oxo-G And Pt-Gg, And The Functions Of Y-Family Dna Polymerases And Rev3l On The Bypass Of Each Of The Dna Lesions In Mammalian Cells, Lizhen Guo

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

I studied the capabilities of the two DNA lesions 8-oxo-guanine and cisplatin intrastrand crosslinked 1,2-d(GpG) or Pt-GG to cause mutations in mammalian cells. Using isogenic cell lines generated from mice with selective gene knockouts of distinct DNA polymerases as models, I deduced the biological functions of the translesion DNA polymerases Pol eta, Pol kappa, Pol iota, Rev1 and Rev3L on bypassing each of the lesions 8-oxo-G and Pt-GG. My study takes advantage of the Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) technology to determine mutagenic effects of the DNA lesions in vivo and effects of translesion DNA polymerases on bypassing the lesions. Through …