1 / 25

Milestones due today. Anything to report?

Milestones due today. Anything to report?. Lecture 17. Ultraconservation evolutionary data Finish early – come hear the talk with us?. Sequence Conservation implies Function. (but which function/s?...). Comparative Genomics of Distantly related species:. functional region!.

summer-barr
Télécharger la présentation

Milestones due today. Anything to report?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Milestones due today. Anything to report? http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  2. Lecture 17 Ultraconservation evolutionary data Finish early – come hear the talk with us? http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  3. Sequence Conservation implies Function • (but which function/s?...) Comparative Genomics of Distantly related species: functional region! ...CTTTGCGA-TGAGTAGCATCTACTATTT... human mammalian ancestor ...ACGTGGGACTGACTA-CATCGACTACGA... mouse http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  4. Human Genome full of Conserved Non-Coding Elements Human Genome: 3*109 letters 1.5% known function compare to other species >50% junk >5% human genome functional 3x more functional DNA than known! ~106 substrings do not code for protein What do they do then? http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  5. Conserved elements in the Human Genome all human-mouse alignments human-mouse ancestral repeats alignment human-mouse ancestral repeats alignment election Difference: 5% of Human Genome 85%id on average [Mouse consortium, Nature 2002] http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  6. Conserved elements in the Human Genome all human-mouse alignments human-mouse ancestral repeats alignment human-mouse ancestral repeats alignment Simple but Unexpected (the lure of Bioinormtaics) election Difference: 5% of Human Genome Ultraconservation 85%id on average [Mouse consortium, Nature 2002] http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  7. Typical DNA Conservation levels (dot = base identical to human) Conserved elements between human and mouse are on average 85% identical. [mouse consortium, 2002] http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  8. Ultraconserved Elements fish 481 elements perfectly conserved (100%id) over 200bp or more between human, mouse and rat. http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10] [Bejerano et al., Science 2004]

  9. * * * * * Ultraconserved Elements: Why? Hundreds of long substrings identical between amniotes they must have rejected many different changes. But... all functions we understand in our genome are encoded using redundant codes. CDS ncRNA TFBS seq. http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  10. Ultras are Functional Back in 2004 we hypothesized: 481 ultraconserved elements “nonexonic” subset – transcriptional regulators exonic subset – post transcriptional regulation [Pennacchio et al., Nature, 2006] [Ni et al., Genes Dev.; Lareau et al., Nature, 2007] http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  11. Genomic Distribution of Ultraconserved Elements • exonic • non • possibly Origins? http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  12. UC.338 comes from an ancient repeat ultraconserved exon novel coelacanth repeat enhancer LF-SINE [Bejerano et al, Nature ,2006] http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  13. Ultras are Under Strong Human Selection Mutational cold spots? NO. Rare (new) mutations are introduced to the population. Fierce purifying selection? YES. Very few of these get anywhere near fixation. A A G A A humans chimp NonSyn DAF Ultra DAF [Katzman et al, Science ,2007] http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  14. No Apparent Phenotype Touch an Ultra And You - DIY [Ahituv et al., PLoS Biology, 2007] http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  15. What can’t we measure in the lab? Ne is population size, s selective dis/advantage. Both of which are VERY wrong in the lab. http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  16. So it can happen – but does it FIX? DNA element t mouse http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  17. Count Fraction Lost, Binned by %id bin by %id count_all t human macaque dog mouse rat count_hole 100bp sliding window dog rat mouse human macaque http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  18. Quite Some Time Later http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  19. Pragmatic Genomics define goal run sensible approach while (results full of artefacts*) { characterize artefact write handler into code rerun } bio cs bio cs * eg: sequencing errors, assembly errors contaminating sequence, ambiguous situations, etc. http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  20. Ultras are Fiercely Retained through Evolution No Apparent Phenotype 100%id primates-dog: 1,691,090bp rodents deleted: 1,447bp (0.086%) Ultras are >300 fold more persistent than neutral DNA But Doomed ... the genomic deletion is (25% deleted) http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  21. How special are the Ultras? election Ultraconservation http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  22. Adding More Species Aha!! http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  23. Adding More Species More and more species Few species Hmmm…. http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  24. Most Non-Coding Elements likely work in cis… “IRX1 is a member of the Iroquois homeobox gene family. Members of this family appear to play multiple roles during pattern formation of vertebrate embryos.” gene deserts regulatory jungles 9Mb http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

  25. … and Ultras are the tip of a functional iceberg gene deserts regulatory jungles 9Mb This dense regulatory jungle contain a single ultra http://cs273a.stanford.edu [Bejerano Fall09/10]

More Related