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Dive into the research topics where Liana F. Lareau is active.

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Featured researches published by Liana F. Lareau.


Cell | 2011

Ribosome Profiling of Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells Reveals the Complexity and Dynamics of Mammalian Proteomes

Nicholas T. Ingolia; Liana F. Lareau; Jonathan S. Weissman

The ability to sequence genomes has far outstripped approaches for deciphering the information they encode. Here we present a suite of techniques, based on ribosome profiling (the deep sequencing of ribosome-protected mRNA fragments), to provide genome-wide maps of protein synthesis as well as a pulse-chase strategy for determining rates of translation elongation. We exploit the propensity of harringtonine to cause ribosomes to accumulate at sites of translation initiation together with a machine learning algorithm to define protein products systematically. Analysis of translation in mouse embryonic stem cells reveals thousands of strong pause sites and unannotated translation products. These include amino-terminal extensions and truncations and upstream open reading frames with regulatory potential, initiated at both AUG and non-AUG codons, whose translation changes after differentiation. We also define a class of short, polycistronic ribosome-associated coding RNAs (sprcRNAs) that encode small proteins. Our studies reveal an unanticipated complexity to mammalian proteomes.


Nature | 2007

Unproductive splicing of SR genes associated with highly conserved and ultraconserved DNA elements

Liana F. Lareau; Maki Inada; Richard E. Green; Jordan C. Wengrod; Steven E. Brenner

The human and mouse genomes share a number of long, perfectly conserved nucleotide sequences, termed ultraconserved elements. Whereas these regions can act as transcriptional enhancers when upstream of genes, those within genes are less well understood. In particular, the function of ultraconserved elements that overlap alternatively spliced exons of genes encoding RNA-binding proteins is unknown. Here we report that in every member of the human SR family of splicing regulators, highly or ultraconserved elements are alternatively spliced, either as alternative ‘poison cassette exons’ containing early in-frame stop codons, or as alternative introns in the 3′ untranslated region. These alternative splicing events target the resulting messenger RNAs for degradation by means of an RNA surveillance pathway called nonsense-mediated mRNA decay. Mouse orthologues of the human SR proteins exhibit the same unproductive splicing patterns. Three SR proteins have been previously shown to direct splicing of their own transcripts, and one of these is known to autoregulate its expression by coupling alternative splicing with decay; our results suggest that unproductive splicing is important for regulation of the entire SR family. We find that unproductive splicing associated with conserved regions has arisen independently in different SR genes, suggesting that splicing factors may readily acquire this form of regulation.


eLife | 2014

Distinct stages of the translation elongation cycle revealed by sequencing ribosome-protected mRNA fragments

Liana F. Lareau; Dustin H Hite; Gregory J. Hogan; Patrick O. Brown

During translation elongation, the ribosome ratchets along its mRNA template, incorporating each new amino acid and translocating from one codon to the next. The elongation cycle requires dramatic structural rearrangements of the ribosome. We show here that deep sequencing of ribosome-protected mRNA fragments reveals not only the position of each ribosome but also, unexpectedly, its particular stage of the elongation cycle. Sequencing reveals two distinct populations of ribosome footprints, 28–30 nucleotides and 20–22 nucleotides long, representing translating ribosomes in distinct states, differentially stabilized by specific elongation inhibitors. We find that the balance of small and large footprints varies by codon and is correlated with translation speed. The ability to visualize conformational changes in the ribosome during elongation, at single-codon resolution, provides a new way to study the detailed kinetics of translation and a new probe with which to identify the factors that affect each step in the elongation cycle. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.01257.001


PLOS Genetics | 2009

Genome-wide identification of alternative splice forms down-regulated by nonsense-mediated mRNA decay in Drosophila.

Kasper D. Hansen; Liana F. Lareau; Marco Blanchette; Richard E. Green; Qi Meng; Jan Rehwinkel; Fabian Lee Gallusser; Elisa Izaurralde; Donald C. Rio; Sandrine Dudoit; Steven E. Brenner

Alternative mRNA splicing adds a layer of regulation to the expression of thousands of genes in Drosophila melanogaster. Not all alternative splicing results in functional protein; it can also yield mRNA isoforms with premature stop codons that are degraded by the nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) pathway. This coupling of alternative splicing and NMD provides a mechanism for gene regulation that is highly conserved in mammals. NMD is also active in Drosophila, but its effect on the repertoire of alternative splice forms has been unknown, as has the mechanism by which it recognizes targets. Here, we have employed a custom splicing-sensitive microarray to globally measure the effect of alternative mRNA processing and NMD on Drosophila gene expression. We have developed a new algorithm to infer the expression change of each mRNA isoform of a gene based on the microarray measurements. This method is of general utility for interpreting splicing-sensitive microarrays and high-throughput sequence data. Using this approach, we have identified a high-confidence set of 45 genes where NMD has a differential effect on distinct alternative isoforms, including numerous RNA–binding and ribosomal proteins. Coupled alternative splicing and NMD decrease expression of these genes, which may in turn have a downstream effect on expression of other genes. The NMD–affected genes are enriched for roles in translation and mitosis, perhaps underlying the previously observed role of NMD factors in cell cycle progression. Our results have general implications for understanding the NMD mechanism in fly. Most notably, we found that the NMD–target mRNAs had significantly longer 3′ untranslated regions (UTRs) than the nontarget isoforms of the same genes, supporting a role for 3′ UTR length in the recognition of NMD targets in fly.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2015

Regulation of splicing factors by alternative splicing and NMD is conserved between kingdoms yet evolutionarily flexible

Liana F. Lareau; Steven E. Brenner

Ultraconserved elements, unusually long regions of perfect sequence identity, are found in genes encoding numerous RNA-binding proteins including arginine-serine rich (SR) splicing factors. Expression of these genes is regulated via alternative splicing of the ultraconserved regions to yield mRNAs that are degraded by nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD), a process termed unproductive splicing (Lareau et al. 2007; Ni et al. 2007). As all human SR genes are affected by alternative splicing and NMD, one might expect this regulation to have originated in an early SR gene and persisted as duplications expanded the SR family. But in fact, unproductive splicing of most human SR genes arose independently (Lareau et al. 2007). This paradox led us to investigate the origin and proliferation of unproductive splicing in SR genes. We demonstrate that unproductive splicing of the splicing factor SRSF5 (SRp40) is conserved among all animals and even observed in fungi; this is a rare example of alternative splicing conserved between kingdoms, yet its effect is to trigger mRNA degradation. As the gene duplicated, the ancient unproductive splicing was lost in paralogs, and distinct unproductive splicing evolved rapidly and repeatedly to take its place. SR genes have consistently employed unproductive splicing, and while it is exceptionally conserved in some of these genes, turnover in specific events among paralogs shows flexible means to the same regulatory end.


Current Opinion in Structural Biology | 2004

The evolving roles of alternative splicing

Liana F. Lareau; Richard E. Green; Rajiv S. Bhatnagar; Steven E. Brenner


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2007

The coupling of alternative splicing and nonsense-mediated mRNA decay

Liana F. Lareau; Angela N. Brooks; David A W Soergel; Qi Meng; Steven E. Brenner


intelligent systems in molecular biology | 2003

Widespread predicted nonsense-mediated mRNA decay of alternatively-spliced transcripts of human normal and disease genes

Richard E. Green; Benjamin P. Lewis; R. Tyler Hillman; Marco Blanchette; Liana F. Lareau; Aaron T. Garnett; Donald C. Rio; Steven E. Brenner


Archive | 2013

Regulation of Gene Expression by Coupling of Alternative Splicing and NMD

David A W Soergel; Liana F. Lareau; Steven E. Brenner


Archive | 2014

METHODS FOR GENOME ASSEMBLY AND HAPLOTYPE PHASING

Richard E. Green; Liana F. Lareau

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Qi Meng

University of California

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Donald C. Rio

University of California

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Maki Inada

University of California

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Marco Blanchette

Stowers Institute for Medical Research

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