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A yeast's eye view of mammalian reproduction: cross-species gene co-expression in meiotic prophase

BACKGROUND: Meiotic prophase is a critical stage in sexual reproduction. Aberrant chromosome recombination during this stage is a leading cause of human miscarriages and birth defects. However, due to the experimental intractability of mammalian gonads, only a very limited number of meiotic genes ha...

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Autores principales: Li, Yunfei, Lam, Ka-sum, Dasgupta, Nairanjana, Ye, Ping
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2944139/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20819218
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-0509-4-125
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author Li, Yunfei
Lam, Ka-sum
Dasgupta, Nairanjana
Ye, Ping
author_facet Li, Yunfei
Lam, Ka-sum
Dasgupta, Nairanjana
Ye, Ping
author_sort Li, Yunfei
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Meiotic prophase is a critical stage in sexual reproduction. Aberrant chromosome recombination during this stage is a leading cause of human miscarriages and birth defects. However, due to the experimental intractability of mammalian gonads, only a very limited number of meiotic genes have been characterized. Here we aim to identify novel meiotic genes important in human reproduction through computational mining of cross-species and cross-sex time-series expression data from budding yeast, mouse postnatal testis, mouse embryonic ovary, and human fetal ovary. RESULTS: Orthologous gene pairs were ranked by order statistics according to their co-expression profiles across species, allowing us to infer conserved meiotic genes despite obvious differences in cellular synchronicity and composition in organisms. We demonstrated that conserved co-expression networks could successfully recover known meiotic genes, including homologous recombination genes, chromatin cohesion genes, and genes regulating meiotic entry. We also showed that conserved co-expression pairs exhibit functional connections, as evidenced by the annotation similarity in Gene Ontology and overlap with physical interactions. More importantly, we predicted six new meiotic genes through their co-expression linkages with known meiotic genes, and subsequently used the genetically more amenable yeast system for experimental validation. The deletion mutants of all six genes showed sporulation defects, equivalent to a 100% validation rate. CONCLUSIONS: We identified evolutionarily conserved gene modules in meiotic prophase by integrating cross-species and cross-sex expression profiles from budding yeast, mouse, and human. Our co-expression linkage analyses confirmed known meiotic genes and identified several novel genes that might be critical players in meiosis in multiple species. These results demonstrate that our approach is highly efficient to discover evolutionarily conserved novel meiotic genes, and yeast can serve as a valuable model system for investigating mammalian meiotic prophase.
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spelling pubmed-29441392010-10-19 A yeast's eye view of mammalian reproduction: cross-species gene co-expression in meiotic prophase Li, Yunfei Lam, Ka-sum Dasgupta, Nairanjana Ye, Ping BMC Syst Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: Meiotic prophase is a critical stage in sexual reproduction. Aberrant chromosome recombination during this stage is a leading cause of human miscarriages and birth defects. However, due to the experimental intractability of mammalian gonads, only a very limited number of meiotic genes have been characterized. Here we aim to identify novel meiotic genes important in human reproduction through computational mining of cross-species and cross-sex time-series expression data from budding yeast, mouse postnatal testis, mouse embryonic ovary, and human fetal ovary. RESULTS: Orthologous gene pairs were ranked by order statistics according to their co-expression profiles across species, allowing us to infer conserved meiotic genes despite obvious differences in cellular synchronicity and composition in organisms. We demonstrated that conserved co-expression networks could successfully recover known meiotic genes, including homologous recombination genes, chromatin cohesion genes, and genes regulating meiotic entry. We also showed that conserved co-expression pairs exhibit functional connections, as evidenced by the annotation similarity in Gene Ontology and overlap with physical interactions. More importantly, we predicted six new meiotic genes through their co-expression linkages with known meiotic genes, and subsequently used the genetically more amenable yeast system for experimental validation. The deletion mutants of all six genes showed sporulation defects, equivalent to a 100% validation rate. CONCLUSIONS: We identified evolutionarily conserved gene modules in meiotic prophase by integrating cross-species and cross-sex expression profiles from budding yeast, mouse, and human. Our co-expression linkage analyses confirmed known meiotic genes and identified several novel genes that might be critical players in meiosis in multiple species. These results demonstrate that our approach is highly efficient to discover evolutionarily conserved novel meiotic genes, and yeast can serve as a valuable model system for investigating mammalian meiotic prophase. BioMed Central 2010-09-06 /pmc/articles/PMC2944139/ /pubmed/20819218 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-0509-4-125 Text en Copyright ©2010 Li et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Li, Yunfei
Lam, Ka-sum
Dasgupta, Nairanjana
Ye, Ping
A yeast's eye view of mammalian reproduction: cross-species gene co-expression in meiotic prophase
title A yeast's eye view of mammalian reproduction: cross-species gene co-expression in meiotic prophase
title_full A yeast's eye view of mammalian reproduction: cross-species gene co-expression in meiotic prophase
title_fullStr A yeast's eye view of mammalian reproduction: cross-species gene co-expression in meiotic prophase
title_full_unstemmed A yeast's eye view of mammalian reproduction: cross-species gene co-expression in meiotic prophase
title_short A yeast's eye view of mammalian reproduction: cross-species gene co-expression in meiotic prophase
title_sort yeast's eye view of mammalian reproduction: cross-species gene co-expression in meiotic prophase
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2944139/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20819218
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-0509-4-125
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