A quantitative view of gene expression levels in the T helper cell system
- π€ Speaker: Dr Sarah Teichmann, Laboratory of Molecular Biology
- π Date & Time: Wednesday 16 May 2012, 12:30 - 13:30
- π Venue: Lecture Theatre, Department of Pathology, Tennis Court Road
Abstract
Gene expression levels are believed to be continuously distributed from very low to very high levels, with most genes at an intermediate level. We have studied the transcriptome-wide distribution of expression levels in mouse T helper cells using RNA -seq technology, and have developed a variety of ways to model the expected background levels. This is critical for definition of a threshold level of expression of a gene in a given cell type. In order to calibrate the RNA -seq expression levels in terms of molecules of mRNA per cell, we have integrated the RNA -seq data with single molecule mRNA-FISH experiments.
The results of these analyses and experiments show that many genes are expressed at > ~ 1 molecule per cell and that two major expression levels can be identified which vary by roughly one to two orders of magnitude. This gives rise to bimodal distributions of gene expression levels in cell populations. Analysis of histone modifications by ChIP-seq indicates that activating modifications such as H3K9 /14ac and H3K4me3 are involved in this βdigitalβ expression switch.
Our findings have broad implications for the analysis RNA -seq and ChIP-seq data and for the understanding of the regulation of gene expression.
References
Hebenstreit, D., Fang, M., Gu, M. Charoensawan, V., van Oudenaarden, A. & Teichmann, S.A. (2011) RNA sequencing reveals two major classes of gene expression levels in metazoan cells. Mol. Sys. Biol., 7:497.
Hebenstreit, D., Gu, M., Haider, S., Turner, D., Lio, P. & Teichmann S.A. (2011) EpiChIP: gene-by-gene quantification of epigenetic modification levels. Nucleic Acids Res., 39, e27
Hebenstreit, D., Deonarine, A., Babu, M.M. & Teichmann, S.A. (2012) Duel of the fates: the role of transcriptional circuits and noise in CD4 + cells. Curr Op Cell Biol., in press.
Series This talk is part of the Immunology in Pathology series.
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Dr Sarah Teichmann, Laboratory of Molecular Biology
Wednesday 16 May 2012, 12:30-13:30