Sima Misra
University of California, Berkeley
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sima Misra.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Barret D. Pfeiffer; Arnim Jenett; Ann S. Hammonds; Teri-T B. Ngo; Sima Misra; Christine Murphy; Audra Scully; Joseph W. Carlson; Kenneth H. Wan; Todd R. Laverty; Christopher J. Mungall; Rob Svirskas; James T. Kadonaga; Chris Q. Doe; Michael B. Eisen; Susan E. Celniker; Gerald M. Rubin
We demonstrate the feasibility of generating thousands of transgenic Drosophila melanogaster lines in which the expression of an exogenous gene is reproducibly directed to distinct small subsets of cells in the adult brain. We expect the expression patterns produced by the collection of 5,000 lines that we are currently generating to encompass all neurons in the brain in a variety of intersecting patterns. Overlapping 3-kb DNA fragments from the flanking noncoding and intronic regions of genes thought to have patterned expression in the adult brain were inserted into a defined genomic location by site-specific recombination. These fragments were then assayed for their ability to function as transcriptional enhancers in conjunction with a synthetic core promoter designed to work with a wide variety of enhancer types. An analysis of 44 fragments from four genes found that >80% drive expression patterns in the brain; the observed patterns were, on average, comprised of <100 cells. Our results suggest that the D. melanogaster genome contains >50,000 enhancers and that multiple enhancers drive distinct subsets of expression of a gene in each tissue and developmental stage. We expect that these lines will be valuable tools for neuroanatomy as well as for the elucidation of neuronal circuits and information flow in the fly brain.
Genome Biology | 2002
Sima Misra; Madeline A. Crosby; Christopher J. Mungall; Beverley B. Matthews; Kathryn S. Campbell; Pavel Hradecky; Yanmei Huang; Joshua S Kaminker; Gillian Millburn; Simon E Prochnik; Christopher D. Smith; Jonathan L Tupy; Eleanor J Whitfield; Leyla Bayraktaroglu; Benjamin P. Berman; Brian Bettencourt; Susan E. Celniker; Aubrey D.N.J. de Grey; Rachel Drysdale; Nomi L. Harris; John Richter; Susan Russo; Andrew J. Schroeder; ShengQiang Shu; Mark Stapleton; Chihiro Yamada; Michael Ashburner; William M. Gelbart; Gerald M. Rubin; Suzanna E. Lewis
BackgroundThe recent completion of the Drosophila melanogaster genomic sequence to high quality and the availability of a greatly expanded set of Drosophila cDNA sequences, aligning to 78% of the predicted euchromatic genes, afforded FlyBase the opportunity to significantly improve genomic annotations. We made the annotation process more rigorous by inspecting each gene visually, utilizing a comprehensive set of curation rules, requiring traceable evidence for each gene model, and comparing each predicted peptide to SWISS-PROT and TrEMBL sequences.ResultsAlthough the number of predicted protein-coding genes in Drosophila remains essentially unchanged, the revised annotation significantly improves gene models, resulting in structural changes to 85% of the transcripts and 45% of the predicted proteins. We annotated transposable elements and non-protein-coding RNAs as new features, and extended the annotation of untranslated (UTR) sequences and alternative transcripts to include more than 70% and 20% of genes, respectively. Finally, cDNA sequence provided evidence for dicistronic transcripts, neighboring genes with overlapping UTRs on the same DNA sequence strand, alternatively spliced genes that encode distinct, non-overlapping peptides, and numerous nested genes.ConclusionsIdentification of so many unusual gene models not only suggests that some mechanisms for gene regulation are more prevalent than previously believed, but also underscores the complex challenges of eukaryotic gene prediction. At present, experimental data and human curation remain essential to generate high-quality genome annotations.
Genome Biology | 2002
Sima Misra; Madeline A. Crosby; Chris Mungall; Beverley B. Matthews; Kathryn S. Campbell; Pavel Hradecky; Yanmei Huang; Joshua S Kaminker; Gillian Millburn; Simon E Prochnik; Christopher D. Smith; Jonathan L Tupy; Eleanor J Whitfield; Leyla Bayraktaroglu; Benjamin P. Berman; Brian Bettencourt; Susan E. Celniker; Aubrey D.N.J. de Grey; Rachel Drysdale; Nomi L Harris; John Richter; Susan Russo; Andrew J. Schroeder; ShengQiang Shu; Mark Stapleton; Chihiro Yamada; Michael Ashburner; William M. Gelbart; Gerald M. Rubin; Suzanna E. Lewis
BackgroundThe recent completion of the Drosophila melanogaster genomic sequence to high quality and the availability of a greatly expanded set of Drosophila cDNA sequences, aligning to 78% of the predicted euchromatic genes, afforded FlyBase the opportunity to significantly improve genomic annotations. We made the annotation process more rigorous by inspecting each gene visually, utilizing a comprehensive set of curation rules, requiring traceable evidence for each gene model, and comparing each predicted peptide to SWISS-PROT and TrEMBL sequences.ResultsAlthough the number of predicted protein-coding genes in Drosophila remains essentially unchanged, the revised annotation significantly improves gene models, resulting in structural changes to 85% of the transcripts and 45% of the predicted proteins. We annotated transposable elements and non-protein-coding RNAs as new features, and extended the annotation of untranslated (UTR) sequences and alternative transcripts to include more than 70% and 20% of genes, respectively. Finally, cDNA sequence provided evidence for dicistronic transcripts, neighboring genes with overlapping UTRs on the same DNA sequence strand, alternatively spliced genes that encode distinct, non-overlapping peptides, and numerous nested genes.ConclusionsIdentification of so many unusual gene models not only suggests that some mechanisms for gene regulation are more prevalent than previously believed, but also underscores the complex challenges of eukaryotic gene prediction. At present, experimental data and human curation remain essential to generate high-quality genome annotations.
Current protocols in human genetics | 2006
Sima Misra; Nomi L. Harris
An annotation is any feature that can be tied to genomic sequence, such as an exon, transcript, promoter, or transposable element. As biological knowledge increases, annotations of different types need to be added and modified, and links to other sources of information need to be incorporated, to allow biologists to easily access all of the available sequence analysis data and design appropriate experiments. The Apollo genome browser and editor offers biologists these capabilities. Apollo can display many different types of computational evidence, such as alignments and similarities based on BLAST searches (UNITS 3.3 & 3.4), and enables biologists to utilize computational evidence to create and edit gene models and other genomic features, e.g., using experimental evidence to refine exon-intron structures predicted by gene prediction algorithms. This protocol describes simple ways to browse genome annotation data, as well as techniques for editing annotations and loading data from different sources.
Genome Biology | 2002
Sima Misra; Madeline A. Crosby; Christopher J. Mungall; Beverley B. Matthews; Kathryn S. Campbell; Pavel Hradecky; Yanmei Huang; Joshua S Kaminker; Gillian Millburn; Simon E Prochnik; Christopher D. Smith; Jonathan L Tupy; Eleanor J Whitfield; Leyla Bayraktaroglu; Benjamin P. Berman; Brian Bettencourt; Susan E. Celniker; Aubrey D.N.J. de Grey; Rachel Drysdale; Nomi L. Harris; John Richter; Susan Russo; Andrew J. Schroeder; ShengQiang Shu; Mark Stapleton; Chihiro Yamada; Michael Ashburner; William M. Gelbart; Gerald M. Rubin; Suzanna E. Lewis
BackgroundThe recent completion of the Drosophila melanogaster genomic sequence to high quality and the availability of a greatly expanded set of Drosophila cDNA sequences, aligning to 78% of the predicted euchromatic genes, afforded FlyBase the opportunity to significantly improve genomic annotations. We made the annotation process more rigorous by inspecting each gene visually, utilizing a comprehensive set of curation rules, requiring traceable evidence for each gene model, and comparing each predicted peptide to SWISS-PROT and TrEMBL sequences.ResultsAlthough the number of predicted protein-coding genes in Drosophila remains essentially unchanged, the revised annotation significantly improves gene models, resulting in structural changes to 85% of the transcripts and 45% of the predicted proteins. We annotated transposable elements and non-protein-coding RNAs as new features, and extended the annotation of untranslated (UTR) sequences and alternative transcripts to include more than 70% and 20% of genes, respectively. Finally, cDNA sequence provided evidence for dicistronic transcripts, neighboring genes with overlapping UTRs on the same DNA sequence strand, alternatively spliced genes that encode distinct, non-overlapping peptides, and numerous nested genes.ConclusionsIdentification of so many unusual gene models not only suggests that some mechanisms for gene regulation are more prevalent than previously believed, but also underscores the complex challenges of eukaryotic gene prediction. At present, experimental data and human curation remain essential to generate high-quality genome annotations.
Science | 2000
Gerald M. Rubin; Mark Yandell; Jennifer R. Wortman; George L. Gabor Miklos; Catherine R. Nelson; Iswar K. Hariharan; Mark E. Fortini; Peter Li; Rolf Apweiler; Wolfgang Fleischmann; J. Michael Cherry; Steven Henikoff; Marian Skupski; Sima Misra; Michael Ashburner; Ewan Birney; Mark S. Boguski; Thomas Brody; Peter Brokstein; Susan E. Celniker; Stephen A. Chervitz; David Coates; Anibal Cravchik; Andrei E. Gabrielian; Richard F. Galle; William M. Gelbart; Reed A. George; Lawrence S.B. Goldstein; Fangcheng Gong; Ping Guan
Genetics | 1999
Allan C. Spradling; David B. Stern; Amy Beaton; E J Rhem; Todd R. Laverty; N. Mozden; Sima Misra; Gerald M. Rubin
Genetics | 1999
Michael Ashburner; Sima Misra; John Roote; Suzanna E. Lewis; R. Blazej; Terence Davis; C. Doyle; Richard F. Galle; Reed A. George; Nomi L. Harris; G. Hartzell; D. Harvey; Ling Hong; K. Houston; Roger A. Hoskins; Glynnis Johnson; C. Martin; A. Moshrefi; M. Palazzolo; M. G. Reese; Allan C. Spradling; Garson Tsang; Kenneth H. Wan; K. Whitelaw; B. Kimmel; Susan E. Celniker; Gerald M. Rubin
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005
Jonathan L Tupy; Adina M. Bailey; Gina Dailey; Martha Evans-Holm; Christian W. Siebel; Sima Misra; Susan E. Celniker; Gerald M. Rubin
Genetics | 1993
Sima Misra; R. M. Buratowski; T. Ohkawa; Donald C. Rio