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            <title><![CDATA[Translation elongation rate varies among organs and decreases with age]]></title>
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            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1093/nar/gkaa1103</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65541">There has been a surge of interest towards targeting protein synthesis to treat diseases and extend lifespan. Despite the progress, few options are available to assess translation in live animals, as their complexity limits the repertoire of experimental tools to monitor and manipulate processes within organs and individual cells. It this study, we developed a labeling-free method for measuring organ- and cell-type-specific translation elongation rates <i>in vivo</i>. It is based on time-resolved delivery of translation initiation and elongation inhibitors in live animals followed by ribosome profiling. It also reports translation initiation sites in an organ-specific manner. Using this method, we found that the elongation rates differ more than 50% among mouse organs and determined them to be 6.8, 5.0 and 4.3 amino acids per second for liver, kidney, and skeletal muscle, respectively. We further found that the elongation rate is reduced by 20% between young adulthood and mid-life. Thus, translation, a major metabolic process in cells, is tightly regulated at the level of elongation of nascent polypeptide chains.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-12-02T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[A network-based comparative framework to study conservation and divergence of proteomes in plant phylogenies]]></title>
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            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1093/nar/gkaa1041</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65541">Comparative functional genomics offers a powerful approach to study species evolution. To date, the majority of these studies have focused on the transcriptome in mammalian and yeast phylogenies. Here, we present a novel multi-species proteomic dataset and a computational pipeline to systematically compare the protein levels across multiple plant species. Globally we find that protein levels diverge according to phylogenetic distance but is more constrained than the mRNA level. Module-level comparative analysis of groups of proteins shows that proteins that are more highly expressed tend to be more conserved. To interpret the evolutionary patterns of conservation and divergence, we develop a novel network-based integrative analysis pipeline that combines publicly available transcriptomic datasets to define co-expression modules. Our analysis pipeline can be used to relate the changes in protein levels to different species-specific phenotypic traits. We present a case study with the rhizobia-legume symbiosis process that supports the role of autophagy in this symbiotic association.</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-11-21T00:00]]></pubDate>
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            <title><![CDATA[Optimized design of antisense oligomers for targeted rRNA depletion]]></title>
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            <link>https://www.novareader.co/book/isbn/10.1093/nar/gkaa1072</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p class="para" id="N65541">RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) is extensively used to quantify gene expression transcriptome-wide. Although often paired with polyadenylate (poly(A)) selection to enrich for messenger RNA (mRNA), many applications require alternate approaches to counteract the high proportion of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) in total RNA. Recently, digestion using RNaseH and antisense DNA oligomers tiling target rRNAs has emerged as an alternative to commercial rRNA depletion kits. Here, we present a streamlined, more economical RNaseH-mediated rRNA depletion with substantially lower up-front costs, using shorter antisense oligos only sparsely tiled along the target RNA in a 5-min digestion reaction. We introduce a novel Web tool, Oligo-ASST, that simplifies oligo design to target regions with optimal thermodynamic properties, and additionally can generate compact, common oligo pools that simultaneously target divergent RNAs, e.g. across different species. We demonstrate the efficacy of these strategies by generating rRNA-depletion oligos for <i>Xenopus laevis</i> and for zebrafish, which expresses two distinct versions of rRNAs during embryogenesis. The resulting RNA-seq libraries reduce rRNA to &lt;5% of aligned reads, on par with poly(A) selection, and also reveal expression of many non-adenylated RNA species. Oligo-ASST is freely available at https://mtleelab.pitt.edu/oligo to design antisense oligos for any taxon or to target any abundant RNA for depletion.</p><p class="para" id="N65542">
<div class="section" id="ga1"><div class="img"><div class="imgeVideo"><div class="img-fullscreenIcon" onClick="javascript:showImageContent('ga1');"><img src="/public/images/journalImg/fullscreen.png"/></div><div class="imageVideo"><img src="/dataresources/secured/content-1765762240527-35880281-9301-4653-9572-8e301325617e/assets/gkaa1072gra1.jpg" alt="Oligo-ASST designs optimized antisense oligo sets to target RNAs for depletion."/></div></div><div class="imgeVideoCaption" id="N65544"><div class="captionTitle">Graphical Abstract</div><div class="captionText">                                      Oligo-ASST designs optimized antisense oligo sets to target RNAs for depletion.</div></div></div></div>
</p>]]></description>
            <pubDate><![CDATA[2020-11-22T00:00]]></pubDate>
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