An evolutionary & developmental biology lab

Author: akopp Page 10 of 15

Optimized transgenic constructs for ectopic protein expression

Here’s a recent paper in PNAS that looks at the use of viral 5′ and 3′ UTRs to enhance gene expression from UAS trangenes.  They show that using particular viral and other heterospecific UTRs can seriously increase protein abundance, and thus give stronger phenotypes.

These tricks are worth considering if you are making UAS or Lex constructs for ectopic geen expression.  More immediately, the enhanced UAS-shi[ts] construct they made can be useful for some of your neuronal silencing experiments.

Quote: “In this report, we demonstrate that sequences derived from the 5′-UTR and 3′-UTR of viral mRNAs, as well as from the abundantly expressed lobster tropomyosin gene (35), are able to function in Drosophila to enhance protein production. By using 5′- and 3′-UTR elements in combination, increases of >20-fold have been achieved, allowing single transgenes to achieve protein expression levels that previously required multiple transgenes, thereby greatly facilitating genetic strain construction. We also show that the 3′-UTR from the Autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus (AcNPV) p10 gene functions efficiently in the female germline. “

Pam receives college Citation for Outstanding Performance in Genetics

Hey everybody – Pam has just received the College of Biological Sciences Citation for Outstanding Performance in Genetics.  These citations “are awarded to students who have achieved academic excellence in their majors and who have participated in an independent research project”.

The CBS annual Honors and Citation Awards Ceremony will be held in the Ballroom in the UC Davis Conference Center on Friday, June 1st, 2012.

Evolution of pigmentation in beach mice

There’s a paper from Hopi Hoekstra’s lab coming out in Evolution, where they look at the genetics of pigmentation in their favorite oldfield/beach mouse populations. The main point of the paper is a comparison between population history estimated from multi-locus data and the phylogeny of the causative gene that causes color variation.  In addition, take a look at the methods – see how they used a combination of sequence capture and barcoding to sequence several thousand random loci as well as a very large region surrounding Mc1R.

Performance comparison of benchtop high-throughput sequencing platforms

A recent paper in Nature Biotechnology has a performance comparison of benchtop high-throughput sequencing platforms.  These “small-scale” (hundreds of megabases to a few gigabases) machines will probably be increasingly prevalent, and useful for our kind of work, so check it out.

Undergraduate research conference

This year, Daniel and Nancy are giving talks, and Emmanuel, George, Lisa, and Margaret are presenting posters at the UC-Davis Undergraduate Research Conference.  They will be describing their recent work on subjects that include sex-specific neural circuits, cell motility, evolution of alternative splicing, tissue-specific transcriptome analysis, and ecological innovations.  Here is the time and place:

Poster Presentations • Friday, April 27, 2012 • Freeborn Hall • 3 – 5:30 p.m.
Oral Presentations • Saturday, April 28, 2012 • Wellman Hall • 9:00 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.

See here for more details

Happy DNA Day!

Everyone! Today April 20, 2012 is national DNA day!

Read more about its history on Wikipedia.

See the cool activities held today to promote education.

Celebrate well (like, by making some themed jewelry or something)!

Video protocol for staining abdominal epidermis

And speaking of John Yoder: here is his video protocol in JoVE for abdominal dissections and immunohistochemistry.  This should be useful to some of you.

dsx and Abd-B interaction in the male abdomen

John Yoder has just published a new paper looking at the interaction between dsx and Abd-B in sculpting the posterior abdominal segments in males vs females.  The posterior abdomen is clearly sexually dimorphic, and in some respects the roles of dsxM and Abd-B in the abdomen are similar to the roles of dsxM and Scr in the sex comb.  In particular, dsx expression is regulated by Abd-B.   But there are also important differences – for example, Abd-B does not seem to be affected by Dsx.  Check it out.

5/11/12 WCB

We will be reading a paper by Jonathan D. Gruber who is from Patricia Wittkopp’s lab. In the paper they compare Protein coding, cis, and trans mutations in S. cerevisiae that lead to an increase or decrease in the fluorescent of a reporter gene (YFP) http://www.plosgenetics.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pgen.1002497 .

A beginner’s guide to eukaryotic genome annotation

The latest issue of NRG has a primer on genome annotation principles and software:

http://www.nature.com/nrg/journal/v13/n5/full/nrg3174.html?WT.ec_id=NRG-201205

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