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Featured researches published by D. Mecenas.


Nature | 2013

A compendium of RNA-binding motifs for decoding gene regulation

Debashish Ray; Hilal Kazan; Kate B. Cook; Matthew T. Weirauch; Hamed Shateri Najafabadi; Xiao Li; Serge Gueroussov; Mihai Albu; Hong Zheng; Ally Yang; Hong Na; Manuel Irimia; Leah H. Matzat; Ryan K. Dale; Sarah A. Smith; Christopher A. Yarosh; Seth M. Kelly; Behnam Nabet; D. Mecenas; Weimin Li; Rakesh S. Laishram; Mei Qiao; Howard D. Lipshitz; Fabio Piano; Anita H. Corbett; Russ P. Carstens; Brendan J. Frey; Richard A. Anderson; Kristen W. Lynch; Luiz O. F. Penalva

RNA-binding proteins are key regulators of gene expression, yet only a small fraction have been functionally characterized. Here we report a systematic analysis of the RNA motifs recognized by RNA-binding proteins, encompassing 205 distinct genes from 24 diverse eukaryotes. The sequence specificities of RNA-binding proteins display deep evolutionary conservation, and the recognition preferences for a large fraction of metazoan RNA-binding proteins can thus be inferred from their RNA-binding domain sequence. The motifs that we identify in vitro correlate well with in vivo RNA-binding data. Moreover, we can associate them with distinct functional roles in diverse types of post-transcriptional regulation, enabling new insights into the functions of RNA-binding proteins both in normal physiology and in human disease. These data provide an unprecedented overview of RNA-binding proteins and their targets, and constitute an invaluable resource for determining post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms in eukaryotes.


Molecular Cell | 2011

In vivo and transcriptome-wide identification of RNA binding protein target sites.

Anna-Carina Jungkamp; Marlon Stoeckius; D. Mecenas; Dominic Grün; Guido Mastrobuoni; Stefan Kempa; Nikolaus Rajewsky

Animal mRNAs are regulated by hundreds of RNA binding proteins (RBPs). The identification of RBP targets is crucial for understanding their function. A recent method, PAR-CLIP, uses photoreactive nucleosides to crosslink RBPs to target RNAs in cells prior to immunoprecipitation. Here, we establish iPAR-CLIP (in vivo PAR-CLIP) to determine, at nucleotide resolution, transcriptome-wide binding sites of GLD-1, a conserved, germline-specific translational repressor in C. elegans. We identified 439 reproducible target mRNAs and demonstrate an excellent dynamic range of target detection by iPAR-CLIP. Upon GLD-1 knockdown, protein but not mRNA expression of the 439 targets was specifically upregulated, demonstrating functionality. Finally, we discovered strongly conserved GLD-1 binding sites near the start codon of target genes. These sites are functional in vitro and likely confer strong repression in vivo. We propose that GLD-1 interacts with the translation machinery near the start codon, a so-far-unknown mode of gene regulation in eukaryotes.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2016

In Vivo Interaction Proteomics in Caenorhabditis elegans Embryos Provides New Insights into P Granule Dynamics

Jia Xuan Chen; Patricia G. Cipriani; D. Mecenas; Jolanta Polanowska; Fabio Piano; Kristin C. Gunsalus; Matthias Selbach

Studying protein interactions in whole organisms is fundamental to understanding development. Here, we combine in vivo expressed GFP-tagged proteins with quantitative proteomics to identify protein-protein interactions of selected key proteins involved in early C. elegans embryogenesis. Co-affinity purification of interaction partners for eight bait proteins resulted in a pilot in vivo interaction map of proteins with a focus on early development. Our network reflects known biology and is highly enriched in functionally relevant interactions. To demonstrate the utility of the map, we looked for new regulators of P granule dynamics and found that GEI-12, a novel binding partner of the DYRK family kinase MBK-2, is a key regulator of P granule formation and germline maintenance. Our data corroborate a recently proposed model in which the phosphorylation state of GEI-12 controls P granule dynamics. In addition, we find that GEI-12 also induces granule formation in mammalian cells, suggesting a common regulatory mechanism in worms and humans. Our results show that in vivo interaction proteomics provides unique insights into animal development.


Genome Biology | 2018

Developmental dynamics of gene expression and alternative polyadenylation in the Caenorhabditis elegans germline

Sean West; D. Mecenas; Michelle Gutwein; David Aristizábal-Corrales; Fabio Piano; Kristin C. Gunsalus

BackgroundThe 3′ untranslated regions (UTRs) of mRNAs play a major role in post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression. Selection of transcript cleavage and polyadenylation sites is a dynamic process that produces multiple transcript isoforms for the same gene within and across different cell types. Using LITE-Seq, a new quantitative method to capture transcript 3′ ends expressed in vivo, we have characterized sex- and cell type-specific transcriptome-wide changes in gene expression and 3′UTR diversity in Caenorhabditis elegans germline cells undergoing proliferation and differentiation.ResultsWe show that nearly half of germline transcripts are alternatively polyadenylated, that differential regulation of endogenous 3′UTR variants is common, and that alternative isoforms direct distinct spatiotemporal protein expression patterns in vivo. Dynamic expression profiling also reveals temporal regulation of X-linked gene expression, selective stabilization of transcripts, and strong evidence for a novel developmental program that promotes nucleolar dissolution in oocytes. We show that the RNA-binding protein NCL-1/Brat is a posttranscriptional regulator of numerous ribosome-related transcripts that acts through specific U-rich binding motifs to down-regulate mRNAs encoding ribosomal protein subunits, rRNA processing factors, and tRNA synthetases.ConclusionsThese results highlight the pervasive nature and functional potential of patterned gene and isoform expression during early animal development.

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Kristen W. Lynch

University of Pennsylvania

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Leah H. Matzat

National Institutes of Health

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Luiz O. F. Penalva

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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