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Articles 1 - 7 of 7

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

Megatevs: Single-Chain Dual Nucleases For Efficient Gene Disruption, Jason M Wolfs, Matthew Dasilva, Sarah E Meister, Xu Wang, Caroline Schild-Poulter, David R. Edgell Jul 2014

Megatevs: Single-Chain Dual Nucleases For Efficient Gene Disruption, Jason M Wolfs, Matthew Dasilva, Sarah E Meister, Xu Wang, Caroline Schild-Poulter, David R. Edgell

Biochemistry Publications

Targeting gene disruptions in complex genomes relies on imprecise repair by the non-homologous end-joining DNA pathway, creating mutagenic insertions or deletions (indels) at the break point. DNA end-processing enzymes are often co-expressed with genome-editing nucleases to enhance the frequency of indels, as the compatible cohesive ends generated by the nucleases can be precisely repaired, leading to a cycle of cleavage and non-mutagenic repair. Here, we present an alternative strategy to bias repair toward gene disruption by fusing two different nuclease active sites from I-TevI (a GIY-YIG enzyme) and I-OnuI E2 (an engineered meganuclease) into a single polypeptide chain. In vitro, …


Automating Dicentric Chromosome Detection From Cytogenetic Biodosimetry Data., Peter K Rogan, Yanxin Li, Asanka Wickramasinghe, Akila Subasinghe, Natasha Caminsky, Wahab Khan, Jagath Samarabandu, Ruth Wilkins, Farrah Flegal, Joan H Knoll Jun 2014

Automating Dicentric Chromosome Detection From Cytogenetic Biodosimetry Data., Peter K Rogan, Yanxin Li, Asanka Wickramasinghe, Akila Subasinghe, Natasha Caminsky, Wahab Khan, Jagath Samarabandu, Ruth Wilkins, Farrah Flegal, Joan H Knoll

Biochemistry Publications

We present a prototype software system with sufficient capacity and speed to estimate radiation exposures in a mass casualty event by counting dicentric chromosomes (DCs) in metaphase cells from many individuals. Top-ranked metaphase cell images are segmented by classifying and defining chromosomes with an active contour gradient vector field (GVF) and by determining centromere locations along the centreline. The centreline is extracted by discrete curve evolution (DCE) skeleton branch pruning and curve interpolation. Centromere detection minimises the global width and DAPI-staining intensity profiles along the centreline. A second centromere is identified by reapplying this procedure after masking the first. Dicentrics …


Validation Of Predicted Mrna Splicing Mutations Using High-Throughput Transcriptome Data, Coby Viner, Stephanie Dorman, Ben Shirley, Peter Rogan Jan 2014

Validation Of Predicted Mrna Splicing Mutations Using High-Throughput Transcriptome Data, Coby Viner, Stephanie Dorman, Ben Shirley, Peter Rogan

Biochemistry Publications

Interpretation of variants present in complete genomes or exomes reveals numerous sequence changes, only a fraction of which are likely to be pathogenic. Mutations have been traditionally inferred from allele frequencies and inheritance patterns in such data. Variants predicted to alter mRNA splicing can be validated by manual inspection of transcriptome sequencing data, however this approach is intractable for large datasets. These abnormal mRNA splicing patterns are characterized by reads demonstrating either exon skipping, cryptic splice site use, and high levels of intron inclusion, or combinations of these properties. We present, Veridical, an in silico method for the automatic validation …


Splicing Mutation Analysis Reveals Previously Unrecognized Pathways In Lymph Node-Invasive Breast Cancer., Stephanie N Dorman, Coby Viner, Peter K Rogan Jan 2014

Splicing Mutation Analysis Reveals Previously Unrecognized Pathways In Lymph Node-Invasive Breast Cancer., Stephanie N Dorman, Coby Viner, Peter K Rogan

Biochemistry Publications

Somatic mutations reported in large-scale breast cancer (BC) sequencing studies primarily consist of protein coding mutations. mRNA splicing mutation analyses have been limited in scope, despite their prevalence in Mendelian genetic disorders. We predicted splicing mutations in 442 BC tumour and matched normal exomes from The Cancer Genome Atlas Consortium (TCGA). These splicing defects were validated by abnormal expression changes in these tumours. Of the 5,206 putative mutations identified, exon skipping, leaky or cryptic splicing was confirmed for 988 variants. Pathway enrichment analysis of the mutated genes revealed mutations in 9 NCAM1-related pathways, which were significantly increased in samples with …


Interpretation Of Mrna Splicing Mutations In Genetic Disease: Review Of The Literature And Guidelines For Information-Theoretical Analysis., Natasha Caminsky, Eliseos J Mucaki, Peter K Rogan Jan 2014

Interpretation Of Mrna Splicing Mutations In Genetic Disease: Review Of The Literature And Guidelines For Information-Theoretical Analysis., Natasha Caminsky, Eliseos J Mucaki, Peter K Rogan

Biochemistry Publications

The interpretation of genomic variants has become one of the paramount challenges in the post-genome sequencing era. In this review we summarize nearly 20 years of research on the applications of information theory (IT) to interpret coding and non-coding mutations that alter mRNA splicing in rare and common diseases. We compile and summarize the spectrum of published variants analyzed by IT, to provide a broad perspective of the distribution of deleterious natural and cryptic splice site variants detected, as well as those affecting splicing regulatory sequences. Results for natural splice site mutations can be interrogated dynamically with Splicing Mutation Calculator, …


Localized, Non-Random Differences In Chromatin Accessibility Between Homologous Metaphase Chromosomes., Wahab A Khan, Peter K Rogan, Joan Hm Knoll Jan 2014

Localized, Non-Random Differences In Chromatin Accessibility Between Homologous Metaphase Chromosomes., Wahab A Khan, Peter K Rogan, Joan Hm Knoll

Biochemistry Publications

BACKGROUND: Condensation differences along the lengths of homologous, mitotic metaphase chromosomes are well known. This study reports molecular cytogenetic data showing quantifiable localized differences in condensation between homologs that are related to differences in accessibility (DA) of associated DNA probe targets. Reproducible DA was observed for ~10% of locus-specific, short (1.5-5 kb) single copy DNA probes used in fluorescence in situ hybridization.

RESULTS: Fourteen probes (from chromosomes 1, 5, 9, 11, 15, 17, 22) targeting genic and intergenic regions were developed and hybridized to cells from 10 individuals with cytogenetically-distinguishable homologs. Differences in hybridization between homologs were non-random for 8 …


Validation Of Predicted Mrna Splicing Mutations Using High-Throughput Transcriptome Data., Coby Viner, Stephanie N Dorman, Ben C Shirley, Peter K Rogan Jan 2014

Validation Of Predicted Mrna Splicing Mutations Using High-Throughput Transcriptome Data., Coby Viner, Stephanie N Dorman, Ben C Shirley, Peter K Rogan

Biochemistry Publications

Interpretation of variants present in complete genomes or exomes reveals numerous sequence changes, only a fraction of which are likely to be pathogenic. Mutations have been traditionally inferred from allele frequencies and inheritance patterns in such data. Variants predicted to alter mRNA splicing can be validated by manual inspection of transcriptome sequencing data, however this approach is intractable for large datasets. These abnormal mRNA splicing patterns are characterized by reads demonstrating either exon skipping, cryptic splice site use, and high levels of intron inclusion, or combinations of these properties. We present, Veridical, an in silico method for the automatic validation …