3 resultados para Codon Usage
em Repositório Institucional da Universidade de Aveiro - Portugal
Resumo:
Recent evidences indicate that tRNA modifications and tRNA modifying enzymes may play important roles in complex human diseases such as cancer, neurological disorders and mitochondrial-linked diseases. We postulate that expression deregulation of tRNA modifying enzymes affects the level of tRNA modifications and, consequently, their function and the translation efficiency of their tRNA corresponding codons. Due to the degeneracy of the genetic code, most amino acids are encoded by two to six synonymous codons. This degeneracy and the biased usage of synonymous codons cause alterations that can span from protein folding to enhanced translation efficiency of a select gene group. In this work, we focused on cancer and performed a meta-analysis study to compare microarray gene expression profiles, reported by previous studies and evaluate the codon usage of different types of cancer where tRNA modifying enzymes were found de-regulated. A total of 36 different tRNA modifying enzymes were found de-regulated in most cancer datasets analyzed. The codon usage analysis revealed a preference for codons ending in AU for the up-regulated genes, while the down-regulated genes show a preference for GC ending codons. Furthermore, a PCA biplot analysis showed this same tendency. We also analyzed the codon usage of the datasets where the CTU2 tRNA modifying enzyme was found deregulated as this enzyme affects the wobble position (position 34) of specific tRNAs. Our data points to a distinct codon usage pattern between up and downregulated genes in cancer, which might be caused by the deregulation of specific tRNA modifying enzymes. This codon usage bias may augment the transcription and translation efficiency of some genes that otherwise, in a normal situation, would be translated less efficiently.
Resumo:
Um dos maiores avanços científicos do século XX foi o desenvolvimento de tecnologia que permite a sequenciação de genomas em larga escala. Contudo, a informação produzida pela sequenciação não explica por si só a sua estrutura primária, evolução e seu funcionamento. Para esse fim novas áreas como a biologia molecular, a genética e a bioinformática são usadas para estudar as diversas propriedades e funcionamento dos genomas. Com este trabalho estamos particularmente interessados em perceber detalhadamente a descodificação do genoma efectuada no ribossoma e extrair as regras gerais através da análise da estrutura primária do genoma, nomeadamente o contexto de codões e a distribuição dos codões. Estas regras estão pouco estudadas e entendidas, não se sabendo se poderão ser obtidas através de estatística e ferramentas bioinfomáticas. Os métodos tradicionais para estudar a distribuição dos codões no genoma e seu contexto não providenciam as ferramentas necessárias para estudar estas propriedades à escala genómica. As tabelas de contagens com as distribuições de codões, assim como métricas absolutas, estão actualmente disponíveis em bases de dados. Diversas aplicações para caracterizar as sequências genéticas estão também disponíveis. No entanto, outros tipos de abordagens a nível estatístico e outros métodos de visualização de informação estavam claramente em falta. No presente trabalho foram desenvolvidos métodos matemáticos e computacionais para a análise do contexto de codões e também para identificar zonas onde as repetições de codões ocorrem. Novas formas de visualização de informação foram também desenvolvidas para permitir a interpretação da informação obtida. As ferramentas estatísticas inseridas no modelo, como o clustering, análise residual, índices de adaptação dos codões revelaram-se importantes para caracterizar as sequências codificantes de alguns genomas. O objectivo final é que a informação obtida permita identificar as regras gerais que governam o contexto de codões em qualquer genoma.
Resumo:
Although the genetic code is generally viewed as immutable, alterations to its standard form occur in the three domains of life. A remarkable alteration to the standard genetic code occurs in many fungi of the Saccharomycotina CTG clade where the Leucine CUG codon has been reassigned to Serine by a novel transfer RNA (Ser-tRNACAG). The host laboratory made a major breakthrough by reversing this atypical genetic code alteration in the human pathogen Candida albicans using a combination of tRNA engineering, gene recombination and forced evolution. These results raised the hypothesis that synthetic codon ambiguities combined with experimental evolution may release codons from their frozen state. In this thesis we tested this hypothesis using S. cerevisiae as a model system. We generated ambiguity at specific codons in a two-step approach, involving deletion of tRNA genes followed by expression of non-cognate tRNAs that are able to compensate the deleted tRNA. Driven by the notion that rare codons are more susceptible to reassignment than those that are frequently used, we used two deletion strains where there is no cognate tRNA to decode the rare CUC-Leu codon and AGG-Arg codon. We exploited the vulnerability of the latter by engineering mutant tRNAs that misincorporate Ser at these sites. These recombinant strains were evolved over time using experimental evolution. Although there was a strong negative impact on the growth rate of strains expressing mutant tRNAs at high level, such expression at low level had little effect on cell fitness. We found that not only codon ambiguity, but also destabilization of the endogenous tRNA pool has a strong negative impact in growth rate. After evolution, strains expressing the mutant tRNA at high level recovered significantly in several growth parameters, showing that these strains adapt and exhibit higher tolerance to codon ambiguity. A fluorescent reporter system allowing the monitoring of Ser misincorporation showed that serine was indeed incorporated and possibly codon reassignment was achieved. Beside the overall negative consequences of codon ambiguity, we demonstrated that codons that tolerate the loss of their cognate tRNA can also tolerate high Ser misincorporation. This raises the hypothesis that these codons can be reassigned to standard and eventually to new amino acids for the production of proteins with novel properties, contributing to the field of synthetic biology and biotechnology.