Lecture 16 and 17: TRANSCRIPTOMICS 1 AND 2 Flashcards
DEFINE TRANSCRIPTOME:
- The ‘transcriptome’ is the SEQUENCE and EXPRESSION PATTERN OF ALL TRANSCRIPTS IN A CELL (where, when, how much).
- This means the COMPLETE SET OF ALL ‘RNA’ MOLECULES, or “transcripts”, PRODUCED IN ONE OR A POPULATION OF CELLS.
The term transcriptome can be applied to the: 2
- total set of transcripts in a GIVEN ORGANISM or
- – the specific SUBSET of TRANSCRIPTS present in a PARTICULAR CELL OR TISSUE TYPE
The transcriptome: 3
- does it vary?
- what does it do in particular?
- what does it reflect?
- Unlike the genome, the ‘transcriptome’ VARIES WITH CHANGING ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS
- Nearly every cell in the body CONTAINS THE SAME GENES/GENOME, ‘BUT DIFFERENT CELLS SHOW DIFFERENT PATTERNS OF GENE EXPRESSION.’ (‘which
makes them the cell they are’).
- Nearly every cell in the body CONTAINS THE SAME GENES/GENOME, ‘BUT DIFFERENT CELLS SHOW DIFFERENT PATTERNS OF GENE EXPRESSION.’ (‘which
- Since all transcripts are CONTAINED IN THE CELL, the transcriptome REFLECTS THE ‘GENES’ THAT ARE BEING ‘ACTIVELY EXPRESSED’ AT A GIVEN TIME.
Transcriptomics measures more than just mRNA…4
- Transcriptomics includes IDENTIFYING and MEASURING EXPRESSION of:
- NONCODING RNAs
- ALTERNATIVELY SPLICED ISOFORMS
- ALTERNATIVE 3’
ENDS, polyA, 3’UTRs etc
- ALTERNATIVE 3’
Transcriptomics questions: 3
‘Now that more and more genome sequences are being completed, new questions arise:’
- – What are the functional roles of different genes and in what cellular processes do they participate?
- – How are genes regulated and how do genes and gene
products interact? - – How do gene expression levels differ in various cell
types and cell states and how is gene expression changed by various diseases or treatments?
‘Differential gene expression’ – HOW ARE = Genes are EXPRESSED when they are TRANSCRIBED…4
- copied into mRNA
- then to — protein,
- OR non- coding genes/functional RNAs like tRNA
- OR small nuclear RNA
(snRNA) .
UNDERSTANDING Differential gene expression: 3
- which genes are EXPRESSED IN WHICH CELLS or TISSUES AT A GIVEN POINT IN TIME OR IN LIFE OF THE ORGANISM.
- Total RNA can be ISOLATED FROM CELLS OR TISSUES UNDER DIFFERENT EXPERIMENTAL CONDITIONS AND THE RELATIVE AMOUNTS OF TRANSCRIBED ‘RNA’ CAN BE MEASURED.
- The CHANGE IN EXPRESSION PATTERN IN RESPONSE to an
EXPERIMENTAL CONDITION, ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE, DRUG TREATMENT, ETC , etc ‘SHEDS LIGHT INTO THE DYNAMIC FUNCTIONING OF A CELL’
- The CHANGE IN EXPRESSION PATTERN IN RESPONSE to an
What can we learn from transcriptomics? = 4
- An understanding of genes and pathways involved in biological processes
2.Elucidate the function of unknown genes based on their spatial and temporal expression
3.* Identify marker genes for diagnosis of diseases à “expression signature”.
- May be a proxy for changes in the proteome and metabolome (but not always!)
What can we learn from transcriptomics?
EXPLAIN - An understanding of genes and pathways involved in biological
processes:
“guilt by association”: genes with similar expression may be functionally related and under the same genetic control mechanism.
What can we learn from transcriptomics?
EXPLAIN -Elucidate the function of unknown genes based on their spatial
and temporal expression. = 2
- E.g. if an unknown gene’s expression levels are dramatically higher in cancer cells than in healthy cells, the unknown gene may play a
role in cell growth.
- E.g. if an unknown gene’s expression levels are dramatically higher in cancer cells than in healthy cells, the unknown gene may play a
- E.g. if an unknown gene is expressed in fat tissue but not in bone or muscle tissue, the unknown gene may be involved in fat storage or metabolism
transcriptomics: applications
MEDICINE:
- – Disease-associated expression patterns (diagnosis, including primary source of cancer).
- – Cell-cycle monitoring (cancer research).
- – Treatment-induced expression pattern (drug development and response).
transcriptomics: applications : BIOLOGY = 5
- – Development and morphology (juveniles vs adults, male vs female,
tissue A vs tissue B). - – Interactions between organisms and their environments (temperature,
radiation, draught, nutrient levels, toxins and heavy metals). - – Evolution (within- and between species variation, hybrids vs parents,
diploids vs polyploids). - – Functional analyses (wild type vs mutant).
- – Time series.
Transcriptomics databases: 5
- We already know the transcriptome of many BASAL STATES
- THE MAMMALIAN GENE COLLECTION
– free, public library of human, mouse and rat mRNA sequences.
- THE MAMMALIAN GENE COLLECTION
- THE MOUSE TRANSCRIPTOME PROJECT
– free, public database of gene transcripts for many
mouse tissues.
- THE MOUSE TRANSCRIPTOME PROJECT
- GENOTYPE-TISSUE EXPRESSION PROJECT (GTEx)
– catalogue of human gene expression in a variety of
different tissues.
- GENOTYPE-TISSUE EXPRESSION PROJECT (GTEx)
- ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ‘DNA’ ELEMENTS (ENCODE)
– aim is for researchers to characterize and understand the working parts of the genome, including the transcriptome
- ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ‘DNA’ ELEMENTS (ENCODE)