How the number of alleles influences gene expression Beata Hat - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

how the number of alleles influences gene expression
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How the number of alleles influences gene expression Beata Hat - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

How the number of alleles influences gene expression Beata Hat Pawel Paszek Marek Kimmel Kazimierz Piechor Tomasz Lipniacki 2/15 Single cell experiments Cytoplasm - nucleus oscillations in NF-kB (red) and IkBa (green) system after TNF


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How the number of alleles influences gene expression

Beata Hat Pawel Paszek Marek Kimmel Kazimierz Piechor Tomasz Lipniacki

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Single cell experiments

2/15 Cytoplasm - nucleus oscillations in NF-kB (red) and IkBa (green) system after TNF treatment

Immortal cancer cell line (SK-N-AS cells), M.R.H. White group Immortal cancer cell line (HeLa cells),

  • A. Brasier

group

IL8 mRNA level after TNF treatment

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The main steps in gene expression

The number of molecules involved: 3/15

b

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The aim of this work

  • How increase in number of gene alleles due to the cancer

development or genome duplication in a cell cycle influences its regulation

  • How the loss of one allele or its transcriptional inactivity

can result in haploinsufficiency disease for autoregulated genes

  • To deduce the behavior of „normal” cells from experiments
  • n the transfected cells
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G - gene state H - transcription rate K - translation rate r - protein degradation rate # of mRNA molecules

A single haploidal gene without feedback regulation

# of protein molecules

Continuous approximation

5/15

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The continuity equations for f (x,y,t) and g(x,y,t) Probability density functions

6/15

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y(t) - protein level

Haploidal gene with feedback

  • The protein degradation time is much larger than mRNA one

(the protein is synthetized directly from the gene and regulates its own expression) 7/15 We have the following continuity equations for f (y,t) and g(y,t) For we obtain

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Diploidal gene with feedback

the functions ( and ) are given by the convolution formulas where and for and for In the case without feedback 8/15

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Positive Feedback

We consider the external induction of self-activating gene There are three patterns of N - allelic (N = 1, 2, 4) gene activation corresponding to different pairs of and in - plane {A} - mode in which gene remains Active (i.e. ) for all {B} - mode in which gene activates for some and distribution is transiently Bimodal {U} - mode in which gene activates for some and its distribution remains Unimodal 9/15

haplo diplo tetra

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{A} - mode {B} - mode {U} - mode

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3 modes of diploidal gene activation

Protein distributions Mean and variance (per gene copy)

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3 regions in - plane corresponding to 3 modes of activation

haploidal gene diploidal tetraploidal 11/15

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9 possible patterns of 1-,2- and 4-copy-gene-system activation

{ABU} sector denotes that tetraploidal gene is in the {A}-mode, diploidal - in the {B}-mode, haploidal - in the {U}-mode haplo diplo tetra

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Mode {AAB},

Mean and variance of the protein (per gene copy) Protein distributions 13/15

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Mode {ABU},

Protein distributions Mean and variance of the protein (per gene copy) 14/15

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Take Home Conclusions

Considering the simultaneous activation of a haploid, diploid and tetraploid gene there exist nine modes of gene activation

  • allele loss may stop the persistent gene activity and

lead to disease if the constant level of gene product is required

  • gene duplication may result in a persistent activity and

lead to disease when haploid or diploid gene is „designed” to act as a switch