Putting the Pieces Together: Exons and piRNAs: A Dissertation
Roy, Christian K.
Citations
Authors
Student Authors
Faculty Advisor
Academic Program
UMass Chan Affiliations
Document Type
Publication Date
Keywords
DNA
Gene Expression
Gene Expression Profiling
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
Protein Isoforms
RNA
RNA, Small Interfering
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Transcriptome
DNA
Gene Expression
Gene Expression Profiling
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
Protein Isoforms
RNA
Small Interfering RNA
DNA Sequence Analysis
Transcriptome
Biochemistry
Bioinformatics
Computational Biology
Genetics
Genomics
Systems Biology
Subject Area
Collections
Embargo Expiration Date
Link to Full Text
Abstract
Analysis of gene expression has undergone a technological revolution. What was impossible 6 years ago is now routine. High-throughput DNA sequencing machines capable of generating hundreds of millions of reads allow, indeed force, a major revision toward the study of the genome’s functional output—the transcriptome. This thesis examines the history of DNA sequencing, measurement of gene expression by sequencing, isoform complexity driven by alternative splicing and mammalian piRNA precursor biogenesis. Examination of these topics is framed around development of a novel RNA-templated DNA-DNA ligation assay (SeqZip) that allows for efficient analysis of abundant, complex, and functional long RNAs. The discussion focuses on the future of transcriptome analysis, development and applications of SeqZip, and challenges presented to biomedical researchers by extremely large and rich datasets.