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Dive into the research topics where Achim Tresch is active.

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Featured researches published by Achim Tresch.


Molecular Systems Biology | 2014

Dynamic transcriptome analysis measures rates of mRNA synthesis and decay in yeast

Christian Miller; Björn Schwalb; Kerstin C. Maier; Daniel Schulz; Sebastian Dümcke; Benedikt Zacher; Andreas Mayer; Jasmin F. Sydow; Lisa Marcinowski; Lars Dölken; Dietmar E. Martin; Achim Tresch; Patrick Cramer

To obtain rates of mRNA synthesis and decay in yeast, we established dynamic transcriptome analysis (DTA). DTA combines non‐perturbing metabolic RNA labeling with dynamic kinetic modeling. DTA reveals that most mRNA synthesis rates are around several transcripts per cell and cell cycle, and most mRNA half‐lives range around a median of 11 min. DTA can monitor the cellular response to osmotic stress with higher sensitivity and temporal resolution than standard transcriptomics. In contrast to monotonically increasing total mRNA levels, DTA reveals three phases of the stress response. During the initial shock phase, mRNA synthesis and decay rates decrease globally, resulting in mRNA storage. During the subsequent induction phase, both rates increase for a subset of genes, resulting in production and rapid removal of stress‐responsive mRNAs. During the recovery phase, decay rates are largely restored, whereas synthesis rates remain altered, apparently enabling growth at high salt concentration. Stress‐induced changes in mRNA synthesis rates are predicted from gene occupancy with RNA polymerase II. DTA‐derived mRNA synthesis rates identified 16 stress‐specific pairs/triples of cooperative transcription factors, of which seven were known. Thus, DTA realistically monitors the dynamics in mRNA metabolism that underlie gene regulatory systems.


Genome Research | 2012

Comparative dynamic transcriptome analysis (cDTA) reveals mutual feedback between mRNA synthesis and degradation

Mai Sun; Björn Schwalb; Daniel Schulz; Nicole Pirkl; Stefanie Etzold; Laurent Larivière; Kerstin C. Maier; Martin Seizl; Achim Tresch; Patrick Cramer

To monitor eukaryotic mRNA metabolism, we developed comparative dynamic transcriptome analysis (cDTA). cDTA provides absolute rates of mRNA synthesis and decay in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Sc) cells with the use of Schizosaccharomyces pombe (Sp) as an internal standard. cDTA uses nonperturbing metabolic labeling that supersedes conventional methods for mRNA turnover analysis. cDTA reveals that Sc and Sp transcripts that encode orthologous proteins have similar synthesis rates, whereas decay rates are fivefold lower in Sp, resulting in similar mRNA concentrations despite the larger Sp cell volume. cDTA of Sc mutants reveals that a eukaryote can buffer mRNA levels. Impairing transcription with a point mutation in RNA polymerase (Pol) II causes decreased mRNA synthesis rates as expected, but also decreased decay rates. Impairing mRNA degradation by deleting deadenylase subunits of the Ccr4-Not complex causes decreased decay rates as expected, but also decreased synthesis rates. Extended kinetic modeling reveals mutual feedback between mRNA synthesis and degradation that may be achieved by a factor that inhibits synthesis and enhances degradation.


Molecular Cell | 2013

Global analysis of eukaryotic mRNA degradation reveals Xrn1-dependent buffering of transcript levels.

Mai Sun; Björn Schwalb; Nicole Pirkl; Kerstin C. Maier; Arne Schenk; Henrik Failmezger; Achim Tresch; Patrick Cramer

The rates of mRNA synthesis and degradation determine cellular mRNA levels and can be monitored by comparative dynamic transcriptome analysis (cDTA) that uses nonperturbing metabolic RNA labeling. Here we present cDTA data for 46 yeast strains lacking genes involved in mRNA degradation and metabolism. In these strains, changes in mRNA degradation rates are generally compensated by changes in mRNA synthesis rates, resulting in a buffering of mRNA levels. We show that buffering of mRNA levels requires the RNA exonuclease Xrn1. The buffering is rapidly established when mRNA synthesis is impaired, but is delayed when mRNA degradation is impaired, apparently due to Xrn1-dependent transcription repressor induction. Cluster analysis of the data defines the general mRNA degradation machinery, reveals different substrate preferences for the two mRNA deadenylase complexes Ccr4-Not and Pan2-Pan3, and unveils an interwoven cellular mRNA surveillance network.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

Spatial, temporal and interindividual epigenetic variation of functionally important DNA methylation patterns

Eberhard Schneider; Galyna Pliushch; Nady El Hajj; Danuta Galetzka; Alexander Puhl; Martin Schorsch; Katrin Frauenknecht; Thomas Riepert; Achim Tresch; Annette M. Müller; Wiltrud Coerdt; Ulrich Zechner; Thomas Haaf

DNA methylation is an epigenetic modification that plays an important role in gene regulation. It can be influenced by stochastic events, environmental factors and developmental programs. However, little is known about the natural variation of gene-specific methylation patterns. In this study, we performed quantitative methylation analyses of six differentially methylated imprinted genes (H19, MEG3, LIT1, NESP55, PEG3 and SNRPN), one hypermethylated pluripotency gene (OCT4) and one hypomethylated tumor suppressor gene (APC) in chorionic villus, fetal and adult cortex, and adult blood samples. Both average methylation level and range of methylation variation depended on the gene locus, tissue type and/or developmental stage. We found considerable variability of functionally important methylation patterns among unrelated healthy individuals and a trend toward more similar methylation levels in monozygotic twins than in dizygotic twins. Imprinted genes showed relatively little methylation changes associated with aging in individuals who are >25 years. The relative differences in methylation among neighboring CpGs in the generally hypomethylated APC promoter may not only reflect stochastic fluctuations but also depend on the tissue type. Our results are consistent with the view that most methylation variation may arise after fertilization, leading to epigenetic mosaicism.


Sexual Development | 2011

Methylation Status of Imprinted Genes and Repetitive Elements in Sperm DNA from Infertile Males

N. El Hajj; Ulrich Zechner; Eberhard Schneider; Achim Tresch; J. Gromoll; Thomas von Hahn; Martin Schorsch; Thomas Haaf

Stochastic, environmentally and/or genetically induced disturbances in the genome-wide epigenetic reprogramming processes during male germ-cell development may contribute to male infertility. To test this hypothesis, we have studied the methylation levels of 2 paternally (H19 and GTL2) and 5 maternally methylated (LIT1, MEST, NESPAS, PEG3, and SNRPN) imprinted genes, as well as of ALU and LINE1 repetitive elements in 141 sperm samples, which were used for assisted reproductive technologies (ART), including 106 couples with strictly male-factor or combined male and female infertility and 28 couples with strictly female-factor infertility. Aberrant methylation imprints showed a significant association with abnormal semen parameters, but did not seem to influence ART outcome. Repeat methylation also differed significantly between sperm samples from infertile and presumably fertile males. However, in contrast to imprinted genes, ALU methylation had a significant impact on pregnancy and live-birth rate in couples with male-factor or combined infertility. ALU methylation was significantly higher in sperm samples leading to pregnancy and live-birth than in those that did not. Sperm samples leading to abortions showed significantly lower ALU methylation levels than those leading to the birth of a baby.


Science | 2016

TT-seq maps the human transient transcriptome.

Björn Schwalb; Margaux Michel; Benedikt Zacher; Katja Frühauf; Carina Demel; Achim Tresch; Julien Gagneur; Patrick Cramer

TT-Seq maps a transient transcriptome RNA expression is related to protein abundance and cellular function. However, the amounts of RNA generated at any one time-point have been difficult to determine. Schwalb et al. developed a method, transient transcriptome sequencing (TT-Seq), to collect and sequence all RNA segments synthesized over 5 minutes. Because 5 minutes is not long enough to fully degrade even the most transient RNA, this method can detect the synthesis of most RNA without bias. Applying this method to human K562 cells, TT-Seq detected thousands of noncoding transcripts, providing a snapshot of RNA synthesis rates and RNA half-lives, and full-length maps of short-lived RNAs such as enhancers and short intergenic noncoding RNAs. Science, this issue p. 1225 Transient transcriptome sequencing maps short-lived RNAs, estimates RNA half-lives, and uncovers transcription termination sites. Pervasive transcription of the genome produces both stable and transient RNAs. We developed transient transcriptome sequencing (TT-seq), a protocol that uniformly maps the entire range of RNA-producing units and estimates rates of RNA synthesis and degradation. Application of TT-seq to human K562 cells recovers stable messenger RNAs and long intergenic noncoding RNAs and additionally maps transient enhancer, antisense, and promoter-associated RNAs. TT-seq analysis shows that enhancer RNAs are short-lived and lack U1 motifs and secondary structure. TT-seq also maps transient RNA downstream of polyadenylation sites and uncovers sites of transcription termination; we found, on average, four transcription termination sites, distributed in a window with a median width of ~3300 base pairs. Termination sites coincide with a DNA motif associated with pausing of RNA polymerase before its release from the genome.


Molecular Human Reproduction | 2010

Quantitative methylation analysis of developmentally important genes in human pregnancy losses after ART and spontaneous conception

Ulrich Zechner; Galyna Pliushch; Eberhard Schneider; Nady El Hajj; Achim Tresch; Yoel Shufaro; Larissa Seidmann; Wiltrud Coerdt; Annette M. Müller; Thomas Haaf

To study possible effects of assisted reproductive technologies (ART) on epigenetic reprogramming, we have analyzed the DNA methylation levels of differentially methylated regions (DMRs) of seven imprinted genes (H19, MEG3, LIT1, MEST, NESP55, PEG3 and SNRPN) as well as the promoter regions of the pluripotency gene NANOG and the tumor suppressor gene APC in chorionic villus samples (CVS) of 42 spontaneous miscarriages and stillbirths after ART and 29 abortions/stillbirths after spontaneous conception. We did not find an increased rate of faulty methylation patterns after ART, but significant and trend differences (ROC curve analysis, Wilcoxon test) in the methylation levels of LIT1 (P = 0.006) and H19 (P = 0.085) between ART and non-ART samples. With the possible exception of NANOG, we did not observe a gestational age effect on the methylation levels of the studied genes. The frequency of extreme methylation values in PEG3 and APC was markedly higher than in the other studied genes, indicating an increased susceptibility of some genes to epigenetic alterations. Most methylation abnormalities in CVS represented either hypermethylated DMRs of paternally and maternally imprinted genes or hypomethylated promoters of non-imprinted genes. The observed methylation abnormalities (mosaicism) are consistent with methylation reprogramming defects during early embryogenesis.


American Journal of Pathology | 2010

Extreme Methylation Values of Imprinted Genes in Human Abortions and Stillbirths

Galyna Pliushch; Eberhard Schneider; Daniela Weise; Nady El Hajj; Achim Tresch; Larissa Seidmann; Wiltrud Coerdt; Annette M. Müller; Ulrich Zechner; Thomas Haaf

Imprinted genes play an important role in fetal and placental development. Using quantitative bisulfite pyrosequencing assays, we determined the DNA methylation levels at two paternally methylated (H19 and MEG3) and four maternally methylated (LIT1, NESP55, PEG3, and SNRPN) imprinted regions in fetal muscle samples from abortions and stillbirths. Two of 55 (4%) spontaneous abortions and 10 of 57 (18%) stillbirths displayed hypermethylation in multiple genes. Interestingly, none of 34 induced abortions had extreme methylation values in multiple genes. All but two abortions/stillbirths with multiple methylation abnormalities were male, indicating that the male embryo may be more susceptible to excess methylation. Hypermethylation of multiple imprinted genes is consistent with stochastic failures of the mechanism, which normally protects the hypomethylated allele from de novo methylation after fertilization. Two of six informative abortions/stillbirths with H19 hypermethylation revealed significant biallelic expression of the autocrine growth factor IGF2. In two other cases hypermethylation of MEG3 was associated with transcriptional down-regulation. We propose that primary epimutations resulting in inappropriate methylation and expression patterns of imprinted genes may contribute to both normal human variation and disease, in particular spontaneous pregnancy loss.


Molecular Systems Biology | 2014

Periodic mRNA synthesis and degradation co-operate during cell cycle gene expression

Philipp Eser; Carina Demel; Kerstin C. Maier; Björn Schwalb; Nicole Pirkl; Dietmar E. Martin; Patrick Cramer; Achim Tresch

During the cell cycle, the levels of hundreds of mRNAs change in a periodic manner, but how this is achieved by alterations in the rates of mRNA synthesis and degradation has not been studied systematically. Here, we used metabolic RNA labeling and comparative dynamic transcriptome analysis (cDTA) to derive mRNA synthesis and degradation rates every 5 min during three cell cycle periods of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A novel statistical model identified 479 genes that show periodic changes in mRNA synthesis and generally also periodic changes in their mRNA degradation rates. Peaks of mRNA degradation generally follow peaks of mRNA synthesis, resulting in sharp and high peaks of mRNA levels at defined times during the cell cycle. Whereas the timing of mRNA synthesis is set by upstream DNA motifs and their associated transcription factors (TFs), the synthesis rate of a periodically expressed gene is apparently set by its core promoter.


Brain | 2008

Array analysis of epilepsy-associated gangliogliomas reveals expression patterns related to aberrant development of neuronal precursors

Jana Fassunke; Michael Majores; Achim Tresch; Pitt Niehusmann; Alexander Grote; Susanne Schoch; Albert J. Becker

Gangliogliomas, the most frequent neoplasms in patients with pharmacoresistant focal epilepsies, are characterized by histological combinations of glial and dysplastic neuronal elements, a highly differentiated phenotype and rare gene mutations. Their molecular basis and relationship to other low-grade brain tumours are not completely understood. Systematic investigations of altered gene expression in gangliogliomas have been hampered by their cellular complexity, the lack of suitable control tissue and of sensitive expression profiling approaches. Here, we have used discrete microdissected ganglioglioma and adjacent control brain tissue obtained from the neurosurgical access to the tumour of identical patients (n = 6) carefully matched for equivalent glial and neuronal elements in an amount sufficient for oligonucleotide microarray hybridization without repetitive amplification. Multivariate statistical analysis identified a rich profile of genes with altered expression in gangliogliomas. Many differentially expressed transcripts related to intra- and intercellular signalling including protein kinase C and its target NELL2 in identical ganglioglioma cell components as determined by real-time quantitative RT-PCR (qRT-PCR) and in situ hybridization. We observed the LIM-domain-binding 2 (LDB2) transcript, critical for brain development during embryogenesis, as one of the strongest reduced mRNAs in gangliogliomas. Subsequent qRT-PCR in dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumours (n = 7) revealed partial expression similarities as well as marked differences from gangliogliomas. The demonstrated gene expression profile differentiates gangliogliomas from other low-grade primary brain tumours. shRNA-mediated silencing of LDB2 resulted in substantially aberrant dendritic arborization in cultured developing primary hippocampal neurons. The present data characterize novel molecular mechanisms operating in gangliogliomas that contribute to the development of dysplastic neurons and an aberrant neuronal network.

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Martin Goetz

University of Tübingen

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