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Institution

Institute for Systems Biology

NonprofitSeattle, Washington, United States
About: Institute for Systems Biology is a nonprofit organization based out in Seattle, Washington, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Proteomics. The organization has 1277 authors who have published 2777 publications receiving 353165 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although overall there is relaxed constraint on human olfaction relative to chimpanzee, species-specific sensory requirements appear to have shaped the evolution of the functional OR gene repertoires in both species.
Abstract: Olfactory receptor (OR) genes constitute the basis of the sense of smell and are encoded by the largest mammalian gene superfamily, with >1000 members. In humans, but not in mice or dogs, the majority of OR genes have become pseudogenes, suggesting that OR genes in humans evolve under different selection pressures than in other mammals. To explore this further, we compare the OR gene repertoire of human with its closest living evolutionary relative, by taking advantage of the recently sequenced genome of the chimpanzee. In agreement with previous reports based on a small number of ORs, we find that humans have a significantly higher proportion of OR pseudogenes than chimpanzees. Moreover, we can reject the possibility that humans have been accumulating OR pseudogenes at a constant neutral rate since the divergence of human and chimpanzee. The comparison of the two repertoires reveals two chimpanzee-specific OR subfamily expansions and three expansions specific to humans. It also suggests that a subset of OR genes are under positive selection in either the human or the chimpanzee lineage. Thus, although overall there is relaxed constraint on human olfaction relative to chimpanzee, species-specific sensory requirements appear to have shaped the evolution of the functional OR gene repertoires in both species.

125 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A role is suggested for Ylr324p, Ygr004p, and Ybr168p together with Pex28p and Pex29p in controlling peroxisome size and proliferation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Abstract: The peroxin Pex23p of the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica exhibits high sequence similarity to the hypothetical proteins Ylr324p, Ygr004p, and Ybr168p encoded by the Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome. Ylr324p, Ygr004p, and Ybr168p are integral to the peroxisomal membrane and act to control peroxisome number and size. Synthesis of Ylr324p and Ybr168p, but not of Ygr004p, is induced during incubation of cells in oleic acid-containing medium, the metabolism of which requires intact peroxisomes. Cells deleted for YLR324w exhibit increased numbers of peroxisomes, whereas cells deleted for YGR004w or YBR168w exhibit enlarged peroxisomes. Ylr324p and Ybr168p cannot functionally substitute for one another or for Ygr004p, whereas Ygr004p shows partial functional redundancy with Ylr324p and Ybr168p. Ylr324p, Ygr004p, and Ybr168p interact within themselves and with Pex28p and Pex29p, which have been shown also to regulate peroxisome size and number. Systematic deletion of genes demonstrated that PEX28 and PEX29 function upstream of YLR324w, YGR004w, and YBR168w in the regulation of peroxisome proliferation. Our data suggest a role for Ylr324p, Ygr004p, and Ybr168p—now designated Pex30p, Pex31p, and Pex32p, respectively—together with Pex28p and Pex29p in controlling peroxisome size and proliferation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

124 citations

Cheng-Jian Xu1, Cilla Söderhäll2, Mariona Bustamante, Nour Baïz3, Olena Gruzieva2, Ulrike Gehring4, Dan Mason5, Leda Chatzi6, Leda Chatzi7, Leda Chatzi8, Mikel Basterrechea, Sabrina Llop9, Maties Torrent, Francesco Forastiere, Maria Pia Fantini10, Karin C. Lødrup Carlsen11, Karin C. Lødrup Carlsen12, Tari Haahtela13, Andréanne Morin14, Marjan Kerkhof1, Simon Kebede Merid2, Bianca van Rijkom1, Soesma A Jankipersadsing1, Marc Jan Bonder1, Stephane Ballereau15, Stephane Ballereau16, Cornelis J. Vermeulen1, Raul Aguirre-Gamboa1, Johan C. de Jongste17, Henriette A. Smit4, Ashok Kumar18, Ashok Kumar2, Ashok Kumar19, Göran Pershagen2, Stefano Guerra20, Judith Garcia-Aymerich21, Dario Greco22, Lovisa E. Reinius2, Rosemary R. C. McEachan5, Raf Azad5, Vegard Hovland12, Petter Mowinckel12, Harri Alenius2, Harri Alenius13, Nanna Fyhrquist2, Nanna Fyhrquist13, Nathanaël Lemonnier23, Nathanaël Lemonnier15, Johann Pellet15, Charles Auffray15, Pieter van der Vlies1, Cleo C. van Diemen1, Yang Li1, Cisca Wijmenga1, Mihai G. Netea24, Miriam F. Moffatt25, William O.C.M. Cookson25, Josep M. Antó, Jean Bousquet26, Jean Bousquet27, Tiina Laatikainen28, Tiina Laatikainen25, Catherine Laprise29, Kai-Håkon Carlsen11, Kai-Håkon Carlsen12, Davide Gori10, Daniela Porta, Carmen Iñiguez9, Jose Ramon Bilbao30, Manolis Kogevinas, John Wright5, Bert Brunekreef4, Juha Kere31, Juha Kere2, Martijn C. Nawijn1, Isabella Annesi-Maesano3, J Sunyer, Erik Melén17, Erik Melén32, Erik Melén2, Gerard H. Koppelman1 
01 Jan 2018
TL;DR: In this paper, a large-scale epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) within the Mechanisms of the Development of ALLergy (MeDALL) project was conducted to assess methylation profiles associated with childhood asthma.
Abstract: Summary Background DNA methylation profiles associated with childhood asthma might provide novel insights into disease pathogenesis. We did an epigenome-wide association study to assess methylation profiles associated with childhood asthma. Methods We did a large-scale epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) within the Mechanisms of the Development of ALLergy (MeDALL) project. We examined epigenome-wide methylation using Illumina Infinium Human Methylation450 BeadChips (450K) in whole blood in 207 children with asthma and 610 controls at age 4–5 years, and 185 children with asthma and 546 controls at age 8 years using a cross-sectional case-control design. After identification of differentially methylated CpG sites in the discovery analysis, we did a validation study in children (4–16 years; 247 cases and 2949 controls) from six additional European cohorts and meta-analysed the results. We next investigated whether replicated CpG sites in cord blood predict later asthma in 1316 children. We subsequently investigated cell-type-specific methylation of the identified CpG sites in eosinophils and respiratory epithelial cells and their related gene-expression signatures. We studied cell-type specificity of the asthma association of the replicated CpG sites in 455 respiratory epithelial cell samples, collected by nasal brushing of 16-year-old children as well as in DNA isolated from blood eosinophils (16 with asthma, eight controls [age 2–56 years]) and compared this with whole-blood DNA samples of 74 individuals with asthma and 93 controls (age 1–79 years). Whole-blood transcriptional profiles associated with replicated CpG sites were annotated using RNA-seq data of subsets of peripheral blood mononuclear cells sorted by fluorescence-activated cell sorting. Findings 27 methylated CpG sites were identified in the discovery analysis. 14 of these CpG sites were replicated and passed genome-wide significance (p −7 ) after meta-analysis. Consistently lower methylation levels were observed at all associated loci across childhood from age 4 to 16 years in participants with asthma, but not in cord blood at birth. All 14 CpG sites were significantly associated with asthma in the second replication study using whole-blood DNA, and were strongly associated with asthma in purified eosinophils. Whole-blood transcriptional signatures associated with these CpG sites indicated increased activation of eosinophils, effector and memory CD8 T cells and natural killer cells, and reduced number of naive T cells. Five of the 14 CpG sites were associated with asthma in respiratory epithelial cells, indicating cross-tissue epigenetic effects. Interpretation Reduced whole-blood DNA methylation at 14 CpG sites acquired after birth was strongly associated with childhood asthma. These CpG sites and their associated transcriptional profiles indicate activation of eosinophils and cytotoxic T cells in childhood asthma. Our findings merit further investigations of the role of epigenetics in a clinical context. Funding EU and the Seventh Framework Programme (the MeDALL project).

123 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This simple method accurately quantifies changes in protein abundance even in cases in which multiple proteins migrate to the same gel coordinates, and is therefore expected to find wide application in proteomics research.

123 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The rapid development of mass spectrometric technologies applied to protein research has catalyzed entirely new experimental approaches and opened up new types of biological questions to experimentation, culminating in the field of proteomics.

122 citations


Authors

Showing all 1292 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Younan Xia216943175757
Ruedi Aebersold182879141881
David Haussler172488224960
Steven P. Gygi172704129173
Nahum Sonenberg167647104053
Leroy Hood158853128452
Mark H. Ellisman11763755289
Wei Zhang112118993641
John Ralph10944239238
Eric H. Davidson10645447058
James R. Heath10342558548
Alan Aderem9924646682
Anne-Claude Gingras9733640714
Trey Ideker9730672276
Michael H. Gelb9450634714
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20233
202260
2021216
2020204
2019188
2018168