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Featured researches published by Anja Zemann.


Current Biology | 2002

Experimental RNomics: Identification of 140 Candidates for Small Non-Messenger RNAs in the Plant Arabidopsis thaliana

Claudia Marker; Anja Zemann; Tanja Terhörst; Martin Kiefmann; James P. Kastenmayer; Pamela J. Green; Jean-Pierre Bachellerie; Jürgen Brosius; Alexander Hüttenhofer

BACKGROUND Genomes from all organisms known to date express two types of RNA molecules: messenger RNAs (mRNAs), which are translated into proteins, and non-messenger RNAs, which function at the RNA level and do not serve as templates for translation. RESULTS We have generated a specialized cDNA library from Arabidopsis thaliana to investigate the population of small non-messenger RNAs (snmRNAs) sized 50-500 nt in a plant. From this library, we identified 140 candidates for novel snmRNAs and investigated their expression, abundance, and developmental regulation. Based on conserved sequence and structure motifs, 104 snmRNA species can be assigned to novel members of known classes of RNAs (designated Class I snmRNAs), namely, small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs), 7SL RNA, U snRNAs, as well as a tRNA-like RNA. For the first time, 39 novel members of H/ACA box snoRNAs could be identified in a plant species. Of the remaining 36 snmRNA candidates (designated Class II snmRNAs), no sequence or structure motifs were present that would enable an assignment to a known class of RNAs. These RNAs were classified based on their location on the A. thaliana genome. From these, 29 snmRNA species located to intergenic regions, 3 located to intronic sequences of protein coding genes, and 4 snmRNA candidates were derived from annotated open reading frames. Surprisingly, 15 of the Class II snmRNA candidates were shown to be tissue-specifically expressed, while 12 are encoded by the mitochondrial or chloroplast genome. CONCLUSIONS Our study has identified 140 novel candidates for small non-messenger RNA species in the plant A. thaliana and thereby sets the stage for their functional analysis.


PLOS Biology | 2010

Tracking Marsupial Evolution Using Archaic Genomic Retroposon Insertions

Maria A. Nilsson; Gennady Churakov; Mirjam Sommer; Ngoc Van Tran; Anja Zemann; Jürgen Brosius; Jürgen Schmitz

Genome-wide comparisons of shared retroposon insertion patterns resolve the phylogeny of marsupials, clearly distinguishing South American and Australian species and lending support to Didelphimorphia as the basal split.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

Evolution of small nucleolar RNAs in nematodes

Anja Zemann; Anja Op De Bekke; Martin Kiefmann; Jürgen Brosius; Jürgen Schmitz

In contrast to mRNAs, which are templates for translating proteins, non-protein coding (npc) RNAs (also known as ‘non-coding’ RNA, ncRNA), exhibit various functions in different compartments and developmental stages of the cell. Small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs), one of the largest classes of npcRNAs, guide post-transcriptional modifications of other RNAs that are crucial for appropriate RNA folding as well as for RNA–RNA and RNA–protein interactions. Although snoRNA genes comprise a significant fraction of the eutherian genome, identifying and characterizing large numbers of them is not sufficiently accessible by classical computer searches alone. Furthermore, most previous investigations of snoRNAs yielded only limited indications of their evolution. Using data obtained by a combination of high-throughput cDNA library screening and computational search strategies based on a modified DNAMAN program, we characterized 151 npcRNAs, and in particular 121 snoRNAs, from Caenorhabditis elegans and extensively compared them with those in the related, Caenorhabditis briggsae. Detailed comparisons of paralog snoRNAs in the two nematodes revealed, in addition to trans-duplication, a novel, cis-duplication distribution strategy with insertions near to the original loci. Some snoRNAs coevolved with their modification target sites, demonstrating the close interaction of complementary regions. Some target sites modified by snoRNAs were changed, added or lost, documenting a high degree of evolutionary plasticity of npcRNAs.


Genome Research | 2008

Retroposed SNOfall—A mammalian-wide comparison of platypus snoRNAs

Jürgen Schmitz; Anja Zemann; Gennady Churakov; Heiner Kuhl; Frank Grützner; Richard Reinhardt; Jürgen Brosius

Diversification of mammalian species began more than 160 million years ago when the egg-laying monotremes diverged from live bearing mammals. The duck-billed platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) and echidnas are the only potential contemporary witnesses of this period and, thereby, provide a unique insight into mammalian genome evolution. It has become clear that small RNAs are major regulatory agents in eukaryotic cells, and the significant role of non-protein-coding (npc) RNAs in transcription, processing, and translation is now well accepted. Here we show that the platypus genome contains more than 200 small nucleolar (sno) RNAs among hundreds of other diverse npcRNAs. Their comparison among key mammalian groups and other vertebrates enabled us to reconstruct a complete temporal pathway of acquisition and loss of these snoRNAs. In platypus we found cis- and trans-duplication distribution patterns for snoRNAs, which have not been described in any other vertebrates but are known to occur in nematodes. An exciting novelty in platypus is a snoRNA-derived retroposon (termed snoRTE) that facilitates a very effective dispersal of an H/ACA snoRNA via RTE-mediated retroposition. From more than 40,000 detected full-length and truncated genomic copies of this snoRTE, at least 21 are processed into mature snoRNAs. High-copy retroposition via multiple host gene-promoted transcription units is a novel pathway for combining housekeeping function and SINE-like dispersal and reveals a new dimension in the evolution of novel snoRNA function.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2010

Retroposon Insertions Provide Insights into Deep Lagomorph Evolution

Jan Ole Kriegs; Anja Zemann; Gennady Churakov; Andreas Matzke; Martina Ohme; Hans Zischler; Jürgen Brosius; Ute Kryger; Jürgen Schmitz

The homogenous mammalian order Lagomorpha comprises about 80 species in two families, Ochotonidae (pikas) and Leporidae (rabbits and hares). However, the phylogenetic relationships among leporids are controversial. Molecular data, particularly from mitochondrial sequences, give highly homoplasious signals. To resolve the controversy between mitochondrial and nuclear data, we analyzed genomic orthologous retroposon insertion sites, a virtually homoplasy-free marker system. From a differential screen of rabbit genomic data for intronic retroposon insertions of CSINE elements, we polymerase chain reaction-amplified and sequenced 11 retroposons in eight representative lagomorphs. We found three retroposons shared among all lagomorphs but absent in outgroups, four confirmed the monophyly of leporids, and three significantly supported Pronolagus as the sister group to all other leporids. One retroposon supported the monophyly of Lepus. The position of Pronolagus outside of the remaining leporids supports the sequence-based signals of nuclear genes and clearly refutes the misleading signals of mitochondrial genes.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2013

Ancestry of the Australian Termitivorous Numbat

Anja Zemann; Gennady Churakov; Stephen C. Donnellan; Frank Grützner; Fangqing Zhao; Jürgen Brosius; Jürgen Schmitz

The Australian numbat, Myrmecobius fasciatus, is the only marsupial that feeds almost exclusively on termites and that has a life following the diurnally restricted and dynamic geographical distribution of termites. The millions of years of this adaptation led to unique morphological and anatomical features, especially basicranial and dental characteristics, that make it difficult to identify a clear phylogenetic affiliation to other marsupials. From DNA sequence analyses, the family Myrmecobiidae is placed within the dasyuromorph marsupials, but the exact position varies from study to study, and support values are mostly rather modest. Here, we report the recovery and analysis of approximately 110,000 quasifossilized traces of mobile element insertions into the genome of a dasyurid marsupial (Tasmanian devil), 25 of which are phylogenetically informative for early dasyuromorphial evolution. Fourteen of these ancient retroposon insertions are shared by the 16 Dasyuromorphia species analyzed, including the numbat, but are absent in the outgroups. An additional 11 other insertions are present in all Dasyuridae but are absent in the numbat. These findings place numbats as the sister group to all living Dasyuridae and show that the investigated Dasyuromorphia, including the Myrmecobiidae, constitutes a monophyletic group that is separated from Peramelemorphia, Notoryctemorphia, and other marsupials.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

Identification of small non-coding RNAs from mitochondria and chloroplasts

Birgit Lung; Anja Zemann; Monika J. Madej; Markus Schuelke; Sandra Techritz; Stephanie Ruf; Ralph Bock; Alexander Hüttenhofer


Genome Research | 2009

Mosaic Retroposon Insertion Patterns in Placental Mammals

Gennady Churakov; Jan Ole Kriegs; Robert Baertsch; Anja Zemann; Juergen Brosius; Juergen Schmitz


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

Beyond DNA: RNA editing and steps toward Alu exonization in primates.

Maren Möller-Krull; Anja Zemann; Christian Roos; Jürgen Brosius; Jürgen Schmitz


Nature | 2008

Genome analysis of the platypus reveals unique signatures of evolution (Nature (2008) 453, (175-183))

Wes Warren; Hillier Ldw.; J. A. Marshall Graves; Ewan Birney; Chris P. Ponting; Frank Grützner; Katherine Belov; Webb Miller; Laura Clarke; Asif T. Chinwalla; Shiaw-Pyng Yang; Andreas Heger; Devin P. Locke; Pat Miethke; Paul D. Waters; Frédéric Veyrunes; Lucinda A. Fulton; Bob Fulton; Tina Graves; John W. Wallis; Xose S. Puente; Carlos López-Otín; G R Ordó̃ez; Evan E. Eichler; Lin Chen; Ze Cheng; Janine E. Deakin; Amber E. Alsop; Katherine Thompson; Patrick J Kirby

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