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Featured researches published by Arun K. Ramani.


Genome Research | 2011

Global impact of RNA polymerase II elongation inhibition on alternative splicing regulation.

Joanna Y. Ip; Dominic Schmidt; Qun Pan; Arun K. Ramani; Andrew G. Fraser; Duncan T. Odom; Benjamin J. Blencowe

The rate of RNA polymerase II (Pol II) elongation can influence splice site selection in nascent transcripts, yet the extent and physiological relevance of this kinetic coupling between transcription and alternative splicing (AS) is not well understood. We performed experiments to perturb Pol II elongation and then globally compared AS patterns with genome-wide Pol II occupancy. RNA binding and RNA processing functions were significantly enriched among the genes with Pol II elongation inhibition-dependent changes in AS. Under conditions that interfere with Pol II elongation, including cell stress, increased Pol II occupancy was detected in the intronic regions flanking the alternative exons in these genes, and these exons generally became more included. A disproportionately high fraction of these exons introduced premature termination codons that elicited nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD), thereby further reducing transcript levels. Our results provide evidence that kinetic coupling between transcription, AS, and NMD affords a rapid mechanism by which cells can respond to changes in growth conditions, including cell stress, to coordinate the levels of RNA processing factors with mRNA levels.


Genome Research | 2011

Genome-wide analysis of alternative splicing in Caenorhabditis elegans

Arun K. Ramani; John A. Calarco; Qun Pan; Sepand Mavandadi; Ying Wang; Andrew C. Nelson; Leo J. Lee; Quaid Morris; Benjamin J. Blencowe; Mei Zhen; Andrew G. Fraser

Alternative splicing (AS) plays a crucial role in the diversification of gene function and regulation. Consequently, the systematic identification and characterization of temporally regulated splice variants is of critical importance to understanding animal development. We have used high-throughput RNA sequencing and microarray profiling to analyze AS in C. elegans across various stages of development. This analysis identified thousands of novel splicing events, including hundreds of developmentally regulated AS events. To make these data easily accessible and informative, we constructed the C. elegans Splice Browser, a web resource in which researchers can mine AS events of interest and retrieve information about their relative levels and regulation across development. The data presented in this study, along with the Splice Browser, provide the most comprehensive set of annotated splice variants in C. elegans to date, and are therefore expected to facilitate focused, high resolution in vivo functional assays of AS function.


Genome Biology | 2009

High resolution transcriptome maps for wild-type and nonsense-mediated decay-defective Caenorhabditis elegans

Arun K. Ramani; Andrew C. Nelson; Philipp Kapranov; Ian Bell; Thomas R. Gingeras; Andrew G. Fraser

BackgroundWhile many genome sequences are complete, transcriptomes are less well characterized. We used both genome-scale tiling arrays and massively parallel sequencing to map the Caenorhabditis elegans transcriptome across development. We utilized this framework to identify transcriptome changes in animals lacking the nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) pathway.ResultsWe find that while the majority of detectable transcripts map to known gene structures, >5% of transcribed regions fall outside current gene annotations. We show that >40% of these are novel exons. Using both technologies to assess isoform complexity, we estimate that >17% of genes change isoform across development. Next we examined how the transcriptome is perturbed in animals lacking NMD. NMD prevents expression of truncated proteins by degrading transcripts containing premature termination codons. We find that approximately 20% of genes produce transcripts that appear to be NMD targets. While most of these arise from splicing errors, NMD targets are enriched for transcripts containing open reading frames upstream of the predicted translational start (uORFs). We identify a relationship between the Kozak consensus surrounding the true start codon and the degree to which uORF-containing transcripts are targeted by NMD and speculate that translational efficiency may be coupled to transcript turnover via the NMD pathway for some transcripts.ConclusionsWe generated a high-resolution transcriptome map for C. elegans and used it to identify endogenous targets of NMD. We find that these transcripts arise principally through splicing errors, strengthening the prevailing view that splicing and NMD are highly interlinked processes.


Cell | 2012

The Majority of Animal Genes Are Required for Wild-Type Fitness

Arun K. Ramani; Tungalag Chuluunbaatar; Adrian J. Verster; Hong Na; Victoria Vu; Nadège Pelte; Nattha Wannissorn; Alan Jiao; Andrew G. Fraser

Almost all eukaryotic genes are conserved, suggesting that they have essential functions. However, only a minority of genes have detectable loss-of-function phenotypes in experimental assays, and multiple theories have been proposed to explain this discrepancy. Here, we use RNA-mediated interference in C. elegans to examine how knockdown of any gene affects the overall fitness of worm populations. Whereas previous studies typically assess phenotypes that are detectable by eye after a single generation, we monitored growth quantitatively over several generations. In contrast to previous estimates, we find that, in these multigeneration population assays, the majority of genes affect fitness, and this suggests that genetic networks are not robust to mutation. Our results demonstrate that, in a single environmental condition, most animal genes play essential roles. This is a higher proportion than for yeast genes, and we suggest that the source of negative selection is different in animals and in unicellular eukaryotes.


PLOS Genetics | 2014

Comparative RNAi screens in C. elegans and C. briggsae reveal the impact of developmental system drift on gene function.

Adrian J. Verster; Arun K. Ramani; Sheldon J. McKay; Andrew G. Fraser

Although two related species may have extremely similar phenotypes, the genetic networks underpinning this conserved biology may have diverged substantially since they last shared a common ancestor. This is termed Developmental System Drift (DSD) and reflects the plasticity of genetic networks. One consequence of DSD is that some orthologous genes will have evolved different in vivo functions in two such phenotypically similar, related species and will therefore have different loss of function phenotypes. Here we report an RNAi screen in C. elegans and C. briggsae to identify such cases. We screened 1333 genes in both species and identified 91 orthologues that have different RNAi phenotypes. Intriguingly, we find that recently evolved genes of unknown function have the fastest evolving in vivo functions and, in several cases, we identify the molecular events driving these changes. We thus find that DSD has a major impact on the evolution of gene function and we anticipate that the C. briggsae RNAi library reported here will drive future studies on comparative functional genomics screens in these nematodes.


Molecular Cell | 2014

A Pair of RNA-Binding Proteins Controls Networks of Splicing Events Contributing to Specialization of Neural Cell Types

Adam D. Norris; Shangbang Gao; Megan L. Norris; Debashish Ray; Arun K. Ramani; Andrew G. Fraser; Quaid Morris; Timothy R. Hughes; Mei Zhen; John A. Calarco

Alternative splicing is important for the development and function of the nervous system, but little is known about the differences in alternative splicing between distinct types of neurons. Furthermore, the factors that control cell-type-specific splicing and the physiological roles of these alternative isoforms are unclear. By monitoring alternative splicing at single-cell resolution in Caenorhabditis elegans, we demonstrate that splicing patterns in different neurons are often distinct and highly regulated. We identify two conserved RNA-binding proteins, UNC-75/CELF and EXC-7/Hu/ELAV, which regulate overlapping networks of splicing events in GABAergic and cholinergic neurons. We use the UNC-75 exon network to discover regulators of synaptic transmission and to identify unique roles for isoforms of UNC-64/Syntaxin, a protein required for synaptic vesicle fusion. Our results indicate that combinatorial regulation of alternative splicing in distinct neurons provides a mechanism to specialize metazoan nervous systems.


BMC Biology | 2017

C. elegans SUP-46, an HNRNPM family RNA-binding protein that prevents paternally-mediated epigenetic sterility

Wendy L. Johnston; Aldis Krizus; Arun K. Ramani; Wade H. Dunham; Ji Young Youn; Andrew G. Fraser; Anne-Claude Gingras; James W. Dennis

BackgroundIn addition to DNA, gametes contribute epigenetic information in the form of histones and non-coding RNA. Epigenetic programs often respond to stressful environmental conditions and provide a heritable history of ancestral stress that allows for adaptation and propagation of the species. In the nematode C. elegans, defective epigenetic transmission often manifests as progressive germline mortality. We previously isolated sup-46 in a screen for suppressors of the hexosamine pathway gene mutant, gna-2(qa705). In this study, we examine the role of SUP-46 in stress resistance and progressive germline mortality.ResultsWe identified SUP-46 as an HNRNPM family RNA-binding protein, and uncovered a highly novel role for SUP-46 in preventing paternally-mediated progressive germline mortality following mating. Proximity biotinylation profiling of human homologs (HNRNPM, MYEF2) identified proteins of ribonucleoprotein complexes previously shown to contain non-coding RNA. Like HNRNPM and MYEF2, SUP-46 was associated with multiple RNA granules, including stress granules, and also formed granules on active chromatin. SUP-46 depletion disrupted germ RNA granules and caused ectopic sperm, increased sperm transcripts, and chronic heat stress sensitivity. SUP-46 was also required for resistance to acute heat stress, and a conserved “MYEF2” motif was identified that was needed for stress resistance.ConclusionsIn mammals, non-coding RNA from the sperm of stressed males has been shown to recapitulate paternal stress phenotypes in the offspring. Our results suggest that HNRNPM family proteins enable stress resistance and paternally-mediated epigenetic transmission that may be conserved across species.


Acta neuropathologica communications | 2016

Spatial genomic heterogeneity in diffuse intrinsic pontine and midline high-grade glioma: implications for diagnostic biopsy and targeted therapeutics

Lindsey M. Hoffman; Mariko DeWire; Scott Ryall; Pawel Buczkowicz; James L. Leach; Lili Miles; Arun K. Ramani; Michael Brudno; Shiva Senthil Kumar; Phillip Dexheimer; Ralph Salloum; Lionel M.L. Chow; Trent R. Hummel; Charles B. Stevenson; Q. Richard Lu; Blaise V. Jones; David P. Witte; Bruce J. Aronow; Cynthia Hawkins; Maryam Fouladi


Genome Research | 2017

Identification of complex genomic rearrangements in cancers using CouGaR

Misko Dzamba; Arun K. Ramani; Pawel Buczkowicz; Yue Jiang; Man Yu; Cynthia Hawkins; Michael Brudno


Archive | 2009

High resolution transcriptome maps for wild-type and NMD mutant C. elegans through development

Arun K. Ramani; Andrew C. Nelson; Philipp Kapranov; Ian Bell; Thomas R. Gingeras; Andrew G. Fraser

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Man Yu

University of Toronto

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Mei Zhen

University of Toronto

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Qun Pan

University of Toronto

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