| Literature DB >> 22204614 |
Ivan Liachko1, Emi Tanaka, Katherine Cox, Shau Chee Claire Chung, Lu Yang, Arael Seher, Lindsay Hallas, Eugene Cha, Gina Kang, Heather Pace, Jasmine Barrow, Maki Inada, Bik-Kwoon Tye, Uri Keich.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The characterization of DNA replication origins in yeast has shed much light on the mechanisms of initiation of DNA replication. However, very little is known about the evolution of origins or the evolution of mechanisms through which origins are recognized by the initiation machinery. This lack of understanding is largely due to the vast evolutionary distances between model organisms in which origins have been examined.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22204614 PMCID: PMC3306766 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-12-633
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Screen to isolate . (A) L. kluyveri genomic DNA was fragmented with MboI and ligated into the pIL07 vector. The resultant libraries were transformed into L. kluyveri strain FM628 and ARS plasmids were isolated from resulting colonies. (B) Representative colony sizes of plasmids showing ARS activity or the lack thereof.
Figure 2[20], [20]plasmids were transformed into . The 'ARS source' column denotes the origin of the ARS, while the 'functions in' column denotes proportion of ARSs that are functional in the listed species. *: of the 80%, 20% of show weak ARS activity while 60% show strong ARS activity in L. kluyveri. 'WGD' denotes the whole genome duplication event leading to the S. cerevisiae lineage.
Figure 3Identification of the . (A) Position Weighted Matrix logos of putative ACS motifs for S. cerevisiae, L. kluyveri and K. lactis. 'WGD' denotes the whole genome duplication event leading to the S. cerevisiae lineage. (B) Sequence logo of the statistically significant 30 bp motif found by GIMSAN in the set of 84 native L. kluyveri ARSs.
Figure 4Truncation of . (A-C) Sub-fragments of three LkARSs (two more shown in Additional File 2, Figure S1) were cloned and tested for ARS function. Black boxes represent functional fragments. Red boxes represent non-functional fragments. For each ARS, the position of the best match to the 9 bp LkACS is indicated by a blue box. The extent of the truncation in basepairs is indicated on the left of the graphics (L = truncated from the left, R = truncated from the right). The length of the original full-length fragment isolated from the screen is indicated next to the first fragment from the top. *: This fragment retains very weak ARS activity.
Figure 5Mutagenesis of . (A-C) the shortest functional fragments of the three LkARSs in Figure 4 were mutated and tested for ARS function. The mutated residues are underlined. Mutations that disrupted ARS function are colored in red. The motif logos correspond to the best match of the predicted 9 bp LkACS and the relevant sequence is colored blue. (D) Representative examples of ARS function. LkARS-E139 mutant plasmids transformed into L. kluyveri and plated on selective media. The numbers correspond to mutant ARS fragments in (A). 'Empty' denotes the empty vector negative control, 'WT' denotes the full length LkARS-E139 positive control.
Figure 6Extended sequence models. Graphical representation of the three linear weights models we studied that factor sequence information beyond the ACS. The paired linear model (A) is using an auxiliary motif in addition to the ACS PWM: the overall score is the weighted sum of the individual (disjoint) match scores. The contextual PWM model (B) consists of the weighted sum of the ACS match and the adjacent matches to the contextual PWMs. The latter are learned from the sites flanking the ACS sites in the alignment of the native ARSs. The Markov contextual model (C) combines the ACS match with the (log of the) Markov likelihood of the adjacent segments (normalized by an iid background model). The contextual Markov models are learned from the alignment of the native ARSs.