Search results for "ogas"

showing 10 items of 902 documents

Transcriptional Activity and Nuclear Localization of Cabut, the Drosophila Ortholog of Vertebrate TGF-β-Inducible Early-Response Gene (TIEG) Proteins

2011

Background Cabut (Cbt) is a C2H2-class zinc finger transcription factor involved in embryonic dorsal closure, epithelial regeneration and other developmental processes in Drosophila melanogaster. Cbt orthologs have been identified in other Drosophila species and insects as well as in vertebrates. Indeed, Cbt is the Drosophila ortholog of the group of vertebrate proteins encoded by the TGF-s-inducible early-response genes (TIEGs), which belong to Sp1-like/Kruppel-like family of transcription factors. Several functional domains involved in transcriptional control and subcellular localization have been identified in the vertebrate TIEGs. However, little is known of whether these domains and fu…

Transcription GeneticNuclear Localization SignalsActive Transport Cell Nucleuslcsh:MedicineGene ExpressionBiochemistrybehavioral disciplines and activities03 medical and health sciencesModel Organisms0302 clinical medicineTransforming Growth Factor betaMolecular Cell Biologymental disordersGeneticsTranscriptional regulationAnimalsDrosophila Proteinslcsh:ScienceBiology030304 developmental biologyGeneticsZinc finger transcription factor0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinarybiologySchneider 2 cellslcsh:RfungiProteinsAnimal Modelsbiology.organism_classificationFusion proteinCellular StructuresDorsal closure3. Good healthRepressor ProteinsDrosophila melanogasterGene Expression RegulationVertebrateslcsh:QDrosophila melanogaster030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDrosophila ProteinNuclear localization sequenceTranscription FactorsResearch ArticleDevelopmental BiologyPLoS ONE
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RNA memory model: a RNA-mediated transcriptional activation mechanism involved in cell identity.

2010

Position-effect variegation (PEV) was discovered in Drosophila melanogaster in 1930 in a study of X-ray-induced chromosomal rearrangements. If a rearrangement places euchromatic genes adjacent to a region of centromeric heterochromatin, it gives a variegated phenotype that results from the random inactivation of genes by heterochromatin spreading from the breakpoint. After the establishment, the inactivation is henceforth clonally inherited. The vast majority of these modifiers were originally isolated in Drosophila as dominant mutations that suppressed or enhanced the variegation caused by a variegating white allele called white-mottled 4 (wm4). A large number of modifier genes alter PEV p…

Transcriptional ActivationAgingBiologyModels BiologicalCell Physiological PhenomenaDNA-directed RNA interferenceRNA interferenceTranscription (biology)AnimalsHumansGene SilencingSmall nucleolar RNAGeneticsPEV RNA Transinduction Cell Identity TransdifferentiationNucleic Acid HeteroduplexesRNACell DifferentiationNon-coding RNALong non-coding RNAChromatinRNA silencingDrosophila melanogasterRNARNA InterferenceGeriatrics and Gerontologyrna memory memRNA epigeneticsRejuvenation research
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Heterogeneity in the response of different subtypes of Drosophila melanogaster enteroendocrine cells to viral infections

2020

SummarySingle cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) offers the possibility to monitor both host and pathogens transcriptomes at the cellular level. Here, public scRNA-seq data from Drosophila melanogaster have been used to compare the differences in replication strategy and cellular response between two viruses, Thika virus (TV) and D. melanogaster Nora virus (DMelNV) in enteroendocrine cells (EEs). TV and DMelNV exhibited different patterns of replication and for TV, accumulation varied according to cell subtype. Cells infected with TV underwent down-regulation of genes that represent bottlenecks in the fruit fly interactome, while cells infected with DMelNV went through a down-expression of tra…

TranscriptomeGeneticsMelanogasterRNAEnteroendocrine cellBiologyDrosophila melanogasterbiology.organism_classificationGeneInteractomeVirus
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Overexpression of Human and Fly Frataxins in Drosophila Provokes Deleterious Effects at Biochemical, Physiological and Developmental Levels

2011

10 pages, 5 figures. 21779322[PubMed] PMCID: PMC3136927

Transgeneved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesBlotting WesternLongevitylcsh:MedicineMitochondrionMotor ActivityAconitaseAnimals Genetically ModifiedModel OrganismsIron-Binding ProteinsMorphogenesisGeneticsAnimalsHumansModel organismlcsh:ScienceBiologyGeneticsAconitate HydrataseGene knockdownBrain DiseasesMultidisciplinaryMovement Disordersbiologyved/biologyDrosophila Melanogasterfungilcsh:RAnimal Modelsbiology.organism_classificationPhenotypeImmunohistochemistryMitochondriaOxidative StressNeurologyFriedreich AtaxiaGenetics of DiseaseFrataxinbiology.proteinChromatography GelMedicinelcsh:QDrosophilaDrosophila melanogasterResearch ArticleDevelopmental BiologyPLoS ONE
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Aberrant splicing of the Drosophila melanogaster phenylalanine hydroxylase pre-mRNA caused by the insertion of a B104/roo transposable element in the…

1999

Abstract We report the insertion of the transposable element B104 in the Phenylalanine hydroxylase gene of the Drosophila mutant Henna-recessive 3 . Its presence alters the Phenylalanine hydroxylase splicing pattern, producing at least two aberrant mRNAs which contain part of the B104 sequence interrupting the coding region. This aberrant splicing is provoked by the use of a cryptic donor site encoded by the B104 3′ long terminal repeat in combination with either the gene intron 3 acceptor site or a novel acceptor site generated by the target duplication caused by transposition. One of them, referred as mRNA type 1, encodes a truncated protein that could be predictably non-functional. In mR…

Transposable elementDNA ComplementaryPhenylalanine hydroxylaseMolecular Sequence DataGenes InsectBiologyBiochemistryRNA PrecursorsAnimalsCoding regionAmino Acid SequenceMolecular BiologyGeneBase SequenceIntronPhenylalanine HydroxylaseExonsTryptophan hydroxylaseMolecular biologyAlternative SplicingMutagenesis InsertionalDrosophila melanogasterInsect ScienceRNA splicingDNA Transposable Elementsbiology.proteinPrecursor mRNAInsect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
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Retrotransposon silencing and telomere integrity in somatic cells of Drosophila depends on the cytosine-5 methyltransferase DNMT2

2009

Here we show that the cytosine-5 methyltransferase DNMT2 controls retrotransposon silencing in Drosophila somatic cells. In Drosophila, significant DNMT2-dependent DNA methylation occurs during early embryogenesis. Suppression of white gene silencing by Mt2 (Dnmt2) null mutations in variegated P[w(+)] element insertions identified functional targets of DNMT2. The enzyme controls DNA methylation at retrotransposons in early embryos and initiates histone H4K20 trimethylation catalyzed by the SUV4-20 methyltransferase. In somatic cells, loss of DNMT2 eliminates H4K20 trimethylation at retrotransposons and impairs maintenance of retrotransposon silencing. In Dnmt2 and Suv4-20 null genotypes, re…

Transposable elementDNA-Cytosine MethylasesEmbryo NonmammalianMethyltransferaseRetroelementsSomatic cellRetrotransposonGene Knockout TechniquesDrosophilidaeGeneticsAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsGene silencingDNA (Cytosine-5-)-MethyltransferasesGene SilencingCrosses GeneticIn Situ Hybridization FluorescenceGeneticsbiologyfungifood and beveragesHistone-Lysine N-MethyltransferaseDNA MethylationTelomerebiology.organism_classificationTelomereMutationDrosophilaDrosophila melanogasterNature Genetics
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Invasion of thehobo transposable element studied byin situ hybridization on polytene chromosomes ofDrosophila melanogaster

1994

The invasion kinetics of hobo transposable element in the Drosophila melanogaster genome was studied by in situ hybridization on the polytene chromosomes. Six independent lines of Drosophila melanogaster flies that had been previously transformed by microinjection of the pHFL1 plasmid containing a complete hobo element were followed over 50 generations. We observed that hobo elements were scattered on each of the chromosome arms, with more insertion sites on the 3R arm. The total number of insertion sites remains quite small, between four and six, at generation 52. On the 2R arm, a short inversion appeared once at generation 52. Most of the integration sites reported here were already descr…

Transposable elementEmbryo NonmammalianCentromerePlant ScienceIn situ hybridizationGenomeChromosomesPlasmidGeneticsMelanogasterAnimalsIn Situ HybridizationGeneticsGenomePolytene chromosomebiologyChromosome MappingChromosomeGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationBlotting SouthernDrosophila melanogasterInsect ScienceDNA Transposable ElementsAnimal Science and ZoologyDrosophila melanogasterGenetica
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Insertion mutation inactivates the expression of the recessive oncogene lethal(2)giant larvae of Drosophila melanogaster

1986

The Drosophila recessive oncogene lethal(2)giant larvae is located at the extreme left end of the second chromosome close to telomeric repetitive sequences. Of the 20 l(2)gl mutant alleles isolated from wild flies in widespread populations of the Soviet Union and California, all but two appear to represent large deletions which have removed the telomeric repetitive sequences and l(2)gl single copy sequences (Mechler et al. 1985). We have analyzed the structure of the two exceptions: the l(2)glGB52 mutation results from the insertion of a single transposable element of the B104 or roo family, whereas the more complex rearrangements of the l(2)glDV275 mutation consists of an 8 kb interstitial…

Transposable elementGeneticsMutantMolecular cloningBiologybiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryChromosomal regionGeneticsInsertionDrosophila melanogasterMolecular BiologyGeneDNAMolecular and General Genetics MGG
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PGal4 excision reveals the pleiotropic effects of Voila, a Drosophila locus that affects development and courtship behaviour

2001

0016-6723 (Print) Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't; In Drosophila melanogaster, the PGal4 transposon inserted at the chromosomal site 86E1-2 is associated with the Voila1 allele that causes multiple phenotypes. Homozygous Voila1/1 flies rarely reach adulthood and heterozygous Voila1/+ adult males display strong homosexual courtship behaviour. Both normal behavioural and developmental phenotypes were rescued by remobilizing the PGal4 element. Yet, the rescue of heterosexual courtship and of adult viability did not occur in the same strains, indicating that these defects have different genetic origins. Furthermore, many strains showed a partial rescue of both characters. Molec…

Transposable elementMaleHeterozygoteEmbryo Nonmammalianmedia_common.quotation_subjectSexual BehaviorLocus (genetics)Nerve Tissue ProteinsLethalCourtshipSexual Behavior AnimalGeneticsAnimal/*physiologyAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsNerve Tissue Proteins/geneticsAlleleDrosophila melanogaster/*physiologyLarva/*growth & developmentmedia_commonGeneticsNonmammalianbiologyCourtship displayReproductionHomozygoteNuclear ProteinsHeterozygote advantageGeneral MedicineHomosexualitybiology.organism_classificationReproduction/geneticsNuclear Proteins/geneticsSurvival RateDrosophila melanogasterGenesEmbryoLarvaDNA Transposable ElementsGenes LethalFemaleDrosophila melanogaster5' Untranslated RegionsDrosophila ProteinTranscription Factors
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Spread of the autonomous transposable element hobo in the genome of Drosophila melanogaster.

1995

The transposable element hobo has been introduced into the previously empty Drosophila melanogaster strain Hikone so that its dynamics can be followed and it can be compared with the P element. Five transformed lines were followed over 58 generations. The results were highly dependent on the culture temperature, the spread of hobo element being more efficient at 25 degrees C. The multiplication of hobo sequences resulted in a change in the features of these lines in the hobo system of hybrid dysgenesis. The number of hobo elements remained low (two to seven copies) and the insertions always corresponded to complete sequences. Our findings suggest that, despite their genetic similarities, P …

Transposable elementMalebiologyStrain (biology)Genes InsectDNAbiology.organism_classificationGenomeP elementBlotting SouthernDrosophila melanogasterGene Expression RegulationEvolutionary biologyDNA Transposable ElementsGeneticsDNA Transposable ElementsAnimalsHybridization GeneticFemaleDrosophila melanogasterMolecular BiologyGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCrosses GeneticPlasmidsMolecular biology and evolution
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