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Featured researches published by Cas Kramer.


Nature | 2003

Role for antisense RNA in regulating circadian clock function in Neurospora crassa

Cas Kramer; Jennifer J. Loros; Jay C. Dunlap; Susan K. Crosthwaite

The prevalence of antisense RNA in eukaryotes is not known and only a few naturally occurring antisense transcripts have been assigned a function. However, the recent identification of a large number of putative antisense transcripts strengthens the view that antisense RNAs might affect a wider variety of processes than previously thought. Here we show that in the model organism Neurospora crassa entrainment of the circadian clock, which is critical for the correct temporal expression of genes and their products, is controlled partly by an antisense RNA arising from a clock component locus. In a wild-type strain, levels of antisense frequency (frq) transcripts cycle in antiphase to sense frq transcripts in the dark, and are inducible by light. In mutant strains in which the induction of antisense frq RNA by light is abolished, the time of the internal clock is delayed relative to the wild-type strain, and resetting of the clock by light is altered. These data provide an unexpected link between antisense RNA and circadian timing and provide a new example of a eukaryotic cellular process regulated by naturally occurring antisense RNA.


Chronobiology International | 2009

Tidal, Daily, and Lunar‐Day Activity Cycles in the Marine Polychaete Nereis virens

Thierry Bailhache; Cas Kramer; Charalambos P. Kyriacou; Ezio Rosato; Peter J.W. Olive

The burrow emergence activity of the wild caught ragworm Nereis virens Sars associated with food prospecting was investigated under various photoperiodic (LD) and simulated tidal cycles (STC) using a laboratory based actograph. Just over half (57%) of the animals under LD with STC displayed significant tidal (∼12.4 h) and/or lunar‐day (∼24.8 h) activity patterns. Under constant light (LL) plus a STC, 25% of all animals were tidal, while one animal responded with a circadian (24.2 h) activity rhythm suggestive of cross‐modal entrainment where the environmental stimulus of one period entrains rhythmic behavior of a different period. All peaks of activity under a STC, apart from that of the individual cross‐modal entrainment case, coincided with the period of tank flooding. Under only LD without a STC, 49% of the animals showed nocturnal (∼24 h) activity. When animals were maintained under free‐running LL conditions, 15% displayed significant rhythmicity with circatidal and circadian/circalunidian periodicities. Although activity cycles in N. virens at the population level are robust, at the individual level they are particularly labile, suggesting complex biological clock‐control with multiple clock output pathways.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2007

Isolation of Total RNA From Neurospora Mycelium

Cas Kramer

In filamentous fungi, including the model organism Neurospora crassa, plentiful biological tissue from which RNA can be extracted may be obtained by allowing fungal spores to germinate and form a mycelium in liquid culture. The mycelium constitutes a mosaic of multinuclear, tubular filaments known as hyphae or mycelia. In general, when exposed to air, fungal hyphae quickly start to develop spores, which are often colorful. However, when submerged in liquid under rapid agitation large amounts of vegetatively growing mycelium can be obtained, which can be easily harvested by means of filtration. To preserve the physiological state of the culture, the mycelium is snap-frozen, and then to free its contents, the mycelium is ground under liquid nitrogen to break all hyphal structures. Here a method to extract high-quality total RNA from Neurospora mycelium using TRIzol reagent is described.


web science | 2005

Dancing to the rhythms of geological time: the biorhythm capabilities of Polychaeta in a geological context

Peter J.W. Olive; Charalambos P. Kyriacou; Cas Kramer; Thiery Bailhache; Ezio Rosato

Summary Errant polychaete worms in the Orders Eunicida (family Eunicidae) and Phyllodocida (families Nereidae and Polynoidae) exhibit a highly developed biorhythmic capability. The Pacific palolo worms are well known for a precisely timed annual breeding event in which mass spawning occurs at a particular time of day, on one day per year, that day having a fixed relationship to the lunar period. Nereidae and Polynoidae exhibit photoperiodic responses that determine the breeding season by regulation of oocyte growth. Nereis virens shows short-term cycles of foraging activity; automated recording of these patterns has revealed four distinct behaviour rhythm phenotypes: circadian, tidal, lunidian and arrhythmic, the last phenotype being expressed during the photoperiod induced growth diapause. The Eunicids and Phyllodocids are represented in the fossil record by scolecodonts, their fossilised jaws. There was a major radiation of these polychaetes during the Ordovician and the earliest suggested polychaete fossils are from the Cambrian. The simultaneous expression of tidal and circadian rhythmicity is characteristic of intertidal animals and it is likely that this complex behavioural repertoire was found in the ancestors of modern terrestrial forms, such as tetrapods and arthropods, prior to their emergence onto land during the Carboniferous and Silurian periods at least 400 Ma. The period of the earths rotation, and hence day length and tidal period, has long been known to be increasing, and additionally the moon to be retreating from the earth, due to the phenomenon of tidal friction caused by the gravitational interactions between the moon and the earth. These changes are significant over a geological time scale. Consequently, the length of day was substantially less (and the number of days in a year more) than at present in the Cambrian and Ordovician periods. Recent theoretical analysis of the period of the earths rotation suggests that the day length prior to a critical period (t crit ) around 1800 Ma may have been stable, with a length of only 4 h. At that time a period of more rapid change in the dynamics of the rotation was initiated. The implications of this theory for the evolution of the biological clock are discussed.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2007

Northern analysis of sense and antisense frequency RNA in Neurospora crassa

Cas Kramer; Susan K. Crosthwaite

In Northern analysis the presence of specific RNA transcripts is detected and their quantity can be estimated. RNA is separated using denaturing agarose gel electrophoresis and is subsequently transferred and fixed to a solid support, such as a nitrocellulose filter. When labeled probes are hybridized to these immobilized RNA molecules, their presence can be visualized by autoradiography. Here we describe Northern hybridization using radioactively labeled riboprobes to show circadian expression of endogenous sense and antisense frequency RNA in the filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa.


Omics A Journal of Integrative Biology | 2006

Annotation of environmental OMICS data: Application to the transcriptomics domain

Norman Morrison; A. Joseph Wood; David Hancock; Sonia Shah; Luke Hakes; Tanya Gray; Bela Tiwari; Peter Kille; Andrew R. Cossins; Matthew J. Hegarty; Michael J. Allen; William H. Wilson; Peter J.W. Olive; Cas Kramer; Thierry Bailhache; Jonathan Reeves; Denise Pallett; J.M. Warne; Karim Nashar; Helen Parkinson; Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Philippe Rocca-Serra; Robert D. Stevens; Jason R. Snape; Andy Brass; Dawn Field


AAPG Bulletin | 2006

Annotation of Environmental OMICS Data: Application to the transcriptomics Domain

Norman Morrison; Josheph Wood; David Hancock; Sonia Shah; Luke Hakes; Tania Gray; Bela Tiwari; Peter Kille; Andrew R. Cossins; Matthew J. Hegarty; Michael J. Allen; Peter J.W. Olive; Cas Kramer; Thierry Bailhache; Jonathan Reeves; Denise Pallett; J.M. Warne; Karim Nashar; Helen Parkinson; Susanna Sansone; Philippe Rocca-Serra; Robert Stevens; Jason R. Snape; Andy Brass; Dawn Field


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2007

Rhythmic Conidiation in Neurospora crassa

Cas Kramer


Journal of Biological Education | 2012

The ‘ethics committee': a practical approach to introducing bioethics and ethical thinking

Mark Goodwin; Cas Kramer; Annette Cashmore


Archive | 2007

Linking DNA structure and sequencing using model based learning

Cas Kramer; Ruth Barber; Annette Cashmore; Raymond Dalgleish; Nicola Suter-Giorgini; Christopher J.R. Willmott

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Andy Brass

University of Manchester

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David Hancock

University of Manchester

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Ezio Rosato

University of Leicester

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Helen Parkinson

European Bioinformatics Institute

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