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    Date Issued2012 (1)2007 (1)2006 (2)2004 (1)Author
    Hope, Ian A. (5)
    Walhout, Albertha J. M. (5)Reece-Hoyes, John S. (4)Deplancke, Bart (3)Grove, Christian A. (3)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationProgram in Gene Function and Expression (5)Program in Molecular Medicine (5)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (2)Document TypeJournal Article (5)KeywordLife Sciences (3)Medicine and Health Sciences (3)Animals (2)Caenorhabditis elegans (2)Genetics and Genomics (2)View MoreJournalBMC genomics (1)Cell (1)Gene (1)Genome biology (1)Genome research (1)

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    A regulatory cascade of three transcription factors in a single specific neuron, DVC, in Caenorhabditis elegans

    Feng, Huiyun; Reece-Hoyes, John S.; Walhout, Albertha J. M.; Hope, Ian A. (2012-02-15)
    Homeobox proteins are critical regulators of developmental gene transcription and cell specification. Many insights into transcriptional regulation have been gained from studies in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. We investigated the expression and regulation of the C. elegans homeobox gene ceh-63, which encodes a single-homeodomain transcription factor of 152 amino acids. ceh-63 is expressed in the interneuron DVC in both sexes, from late embryogenesis through adulthood, and two pairs of uterine cells in reproductive hermaphrodites only. A reporter gene fusion, encoding GFP fused to the full-length CEH-63, also drove weak inconsistent expression in additional unidentified cells in the head and tail. A potential ceh-63 null mutant had no obvious abnormalities, except for a possible increase in subtle defects of the DVC axon projection. No behavioural responses were observed upon either laser ablation of DVC or activation of DVC through light stimulation of channelrhodopsin-2 specifically expressed in this neuron. The function of DVC therefore remains enigmatic. A transcriptional regulatory cascade operating in DVC was defined from the LIM-homeodomain protein CEH-14 through CEH-63 to the helix-turn-helix transcription factor MBR-1. Both CEH-14 and CEH-63 individually bound the mbr-1 promoter in a yeast one-hybrid assay. A model is proposed suggesting that CEH-14 activates ceh-63 and then along with CEH-63 co-ordinately activates mbr-1.
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    Insight into transcription factor gene duplication from Caenorhabditis elegans Promoterome-driven expression patterns

    Reece-Hoyes, John S.; Shingles, Jane; Dupuy, Denis; Grove, Christian A.; Walhout, Albertha J. M.; Vidal, Marc; Hope, Ian A. (2007-01-25)
    BACKGROUND: The C. elegans Promoterome is a powerful resource for revealing the regulatory mechanisms by which transcription is controlled pan-genomically. Transcription factors will form the core of any systems biology model of genome control and therefore the promoter activity of Promoterome inserts for C. elegans transcription factor genes was examined, in vivo, with a reporter gene approach. RESULTS: Transgenic C. elegans strains were generated for 366 transcription factor promoter/gfp reporter gene fusions. GFP distributions were determined, and then summarized with reference to developmental stage and cell type. Reliability of these data was demonstrated by comparison to previously described gene product distributions. A detailed consideration of the results for one C. elegans transcription factor gene family, the Six family, comprising ceh-32, ceh-33, ceh-34 and unc-39 illustrates the value of these analyses. The high proportion of Promoterome reporter fusions that drove GFP expression, compared to previous studies, led to the hypothesis that transcription factor genes might be involved in local gene duplication events less frequently than other genes. Comparison of transcription factor genes of C. elegans and Caenorhabditis briggsae was therefore carried out and revealed very few examples of functional gene duplication since the divergence of these species for most, but not all, transcription factor gene families. CONCLUSION: Examining reporter expression patterns for hundreds of promoters informs, and thereby improves, interpretation of this data type. Genes encoding transcription factors involved in intrinsic developmental control processes appear acutely sensitive to changes in gene dosage through local gene duplication, on an evolutionary time scale.
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    A gene-centered C. elegans protein-DNA interaction network

    Deplancke, Bart; Mukhopadhyay, Arnab; Ao, Wanyuan; Elewa, Ahmed M.; Grove, Christian A.; Martinez, Natalia Julia; Sequerra, Reynaldo; Doucette-Stamm, Lynn; Reece-Hoyes, John S.; Hope, Ian A.; et al. (2006-06-17)
    Transcription regulatory networks consist of physical and functional interactions between transcription factors (TFs) and their target genes. The systematic mapping of TF-target gene interactions has been pioneered in unicellular systems, using "TF-centered" methods (e.g., chromatin immunoprecipitation). However, metazoan systems are less amenable to such methods. Here, we used "gene-centered" high-throughput yeast one-hybrid (Y1H) assays to identify 283 interactions between 72 C. elegans digestive tract gene promoters and 117 proteins. The resulting protein-DNA interaction (PDI) network is highly connected and enriched for TFs that are expressed in the digestive tract. We provide functional annotations for approximately 10% of all worm TFs, many of which were previously uncharacterized, and find ten novel putative TFs, illustrating the power of a gene-centered approach. We provide additional in vivo evidence for multiple PDIs and illustrate how the PDI network provides insights into metazoan differential gene expression at a systems level. Y1H dataset can be found as a supplemental file to this paper. See Additional Files below. Legend at bottom of Excel spreadsheet.
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    A compendium of Caenorhabditis elegans regulatory transcription factors: a resource for mapping transcription regulatory networks

    Reece-Hoyes, John S.; Deplancke, Bart; Shingles, Jane; Grove, Christian A.; Hope, Ian A.; Walhout, Albertha J. M. (2006-01-20)
    BACKGROUND: Transcription regulatory networks are composed of interactions between transcription factors and their target genes. Whereas unicellular networks have been studied extensively, metazoan transcription regulatory networks remain largely unexplored. Caenorhabditis elegans provides a powerful model to study such metazoan networks because its genome is completely sequenced and many functional genomic tools are available. While C. elegans gene predictions have undergone continuous refinement, this is not true for the annotation of functional transcription factors. The comprehensive identification of transcription factors is essential for the systematic mapping of transcription regulatory networks because it enables the creation of physical transcription factor resources that can be used in assays to map interactions between transcription factors and their target genes. RESULTS: By computational searches and extensive manual curation, we have identified a compendium of 934 transcription factor genes (referred to as wTF2.0). We find that manual curation drastically reduces the number of both false positive and false negative transcription factor predictions. We discuss how transcription factor splice variants and dimer formation may affect the total number of functional transcription factors. In contrast to mouse transcription factor genes, we find that C. elegans transcription factor genes do not undergo significantly more splicing than other genes. This difference may contribute to differences in organism complexity. We identify candidate redundant worm transcription factor genes and orthologous worm and human transcription factor pairs. Finally, we discuss how wTF2.0 can be used together with physical transcription factor clone resources to facilitate the systematic mapping of C. elegans transcription regulatory networks. CONCLUSION: wTF2.0 provides a starting point to decipher the transcription regulatory networks that control metazoan development and function.
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    A first version of the Caenorhabditis elegans Promoterome

    Dupuy, Denis; Li, Qian-Ru; Deplancke, Bart; Boxem, Mike; Hao, Tong; Lamesch, Philippe; Sequerra, Reynaldo; Bosak, Stephanie; Doucette-Stamm, Lynn; Hope, Ian A.; et al. (2004-10-19)
    An important aspect of the development of systems biology approaches in metazoans is the characterization of expression patterns of nearly all genes predicted from genome sequences. Such "localizome" maps should provide information on where (in what cells or tissues) and when (at what stage of development or under what conditions) genes are expressed. They should also indicate in what cellular compartments the corresponding proteins are localized. Caenorhabditis elegans is particularly suited for the development of a localizome map since all its 959 adult somatic cells can be visualized by microscopy, and its cell lineage has been completely described. Here we address one of the challenges of C. elegans localizome mapping projects: that of obtaining a genome-wide resource of C. elegans promoters needed to generate transgenic animals expressing localization markers such as the green fluorescent protein (GFP). To ensure high flexibility for future uses, we utilized the newly developed MultiSite Gateway system. We generated and validated "version 1.1" of the Promoterome: a resource of approximately 6000 C. elegans promoters. These promoters can be transferred easily into various Gateway Destination vectors to drive expression of markers such as GFP, alone (promoter::GFP constructs), or in fusion with protein-encoding open reading frames available in ORFeome resources (promoter::ORF::GFP).
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