TSS seq based core promoter architecture in blood feeding Tsetse fly (Glossina morsitans morsitans) vector of Trypanosomiasis
Sarah Mwangi, Geoffrey Attardo, Yutaka Suzuki, Serap Aksoy, Alan Christoffels

TL;DR
This study explores how the Tsetse fly regulates gene transcription, identifying unique promoter architectures and motif combinations in a blood-feeding insect.
Contribution
The study identifies novel motif combinations in Tsetse fly promoters, revealing how they compensate for the absence of TATA motifs.
Findings
Tsetse fly promoters show a preference for AT nucleotides and specific dinucleotide patterns like CA and AA.
Broad promoters in Tsetse flies frequently contain the MTE-DPE motif pair and lack TATA motifs, unlike Drosophila.
Gene ontology analysis links developmental processes to narrow and broad with peak promoters.
Abstract
Transcription initiation regulation is mediated by sequence-specific interactions between DNA-binding proteins (transcription factors) and cis-elements, where BRE, TATA, INR, DPE and MTE motifs constitute canonical core motifs for basal transcription initiation of genes. Accurate identification of transcription start site (TSS) and their corresponding promoter regions is critical for delineation of these motifs. To this end, the genome scale analysis of core promoter architecture in insects has been confined to Drosophila. The recently sequenced Tsetse fly genome provides a unique opportunity to analyze transcription initiation regulation machinery in blood-feeding insects. A computational method for identification of TSS in newly sequenced Tsetse fly genome was evaluated, using TSS seq tags sampled from two developmental stages namely; larvae and pupae. There were 3134 tag clusters…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsIslamic Finance and Banking Studies · Legal Studies and Policies · Marriage and Family Dynamics
