Rolle der Variation der langen ncRNAs in A. thaliana
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What makes us different from each other? Biology, and in particular genome research, try to answer this question. Our genome and genomes of other organisms can be transcribed into RNA and then translated into proteins the building blocks of the organism. Pieces of the genome coding for different proteins are called protein-coding genes and have long been considered the main information carried by the genome. However, in the last decades we have realized that non-protein-coding parts of the genome are also very important. They give rise to many RNAs, non-coding RNAs, that never turn into proteins, but some of which have been shown to regulate many important processes in the cell. One class of such RNA molecules is called long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) and they have a very interesting history: they are everywhere in the genome, but no one noticed this before because the appropriate technology was not available. Now we know there are >60,000 lncRNA genes in the human genome, and hundreds to thousands are found in many other organisms too. These genes seem to regulate other genes through many different mechanisms. For example, they can cause chemical modifications on other genes, called epigenetic modifications, inactivating the gene without changing its genetic sequence. Recently it was found that lncRNAs are expressed in a person-specific manner, i.e. their natural expression variation is very high, while protein-coding gene expression is more constant. Could lncRNAs contribute to our differences if they are different between different people? This is the background question of this project. Humans are difficult to study experimentally, but fundamental questions can be addressed using model organisms, since all life on earth have, fundamentally, a lot in common. The best model system to study natural variation is plants. Research in plants has helped uncover many fundamental aspects of how genomes work. The most commonly used plant is Arabidopsis thaliana a small flower that grows everywhere in Europe. What we want to do in this project is to use a collection of these plants from almost 1000 different geographic locations to analyze lncRNA variation. Members of this collection have slightly different genomes, just like humans do. We will try to understand what differences in the genome, or in epigenetic modifications of it, make lncRNA expression so individually variable and how this variability affects expression of other genes, epigenetic marks on these genes, and different traits of the plants (phenotypes), such as resistance to pathogens. I will perform genetic manipulation experiments to prove functional roles for several of the most interesting lncRNAs that we will find. Plants are immobile, and adaptation to the environment is especially important for them. I will use the data and the analyses produced in this project to find lncRNAs that might be involved in the adaptation of Arabidopsis thaliana.
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