Hassan uz Zaman
hassanzaman.bsky.social
Hassan uz Zaman
@hassanzaman.bsky.social
Aisha's husband, currently studying new gene evolution at University of Texas at Austin.

এমন দেশটি কোথাও খুঁজে পাবে নাকো তুমি
Another month, another awesome Protein Structure Evolution talk! Register here if you like cool science: tinyurl.com/prose-seminar2

Jointly organized by @lacholt.bsky.social, @caro-rocha.bsky.social, @claudiaalcar.bsky.social, @zachary-ardern.bsky.social and myself.

(Starts in half an hour!)
November 11, 2025 at 3:29 PM
In case y'all are interested in cool science about protein evolution—join our monthly seminar series! tinyurl.com/prose-seminar2

Organized by @lacholt.bsky.social @caro-rocha.bsky.social @claudiaalcar.bsky.social and myself.

(Stephen Fried is set to deliver this week's seminar in half an hour!)
October 14, 2025 at 2:27 PM
I understand "pervasive/spurious translation" to mean "the protein is non-functional". See the example below from Stringer et al (2021)—I think this is the common usage.

Do people disagree with this? Are there other ways of using this phrase in the literature that I'm not familiar with?
October 1, 2025 at 12:10 AM
Reposted by Hassan uz Zaman
Unannotated translation products are widespread in model E. coli | bioRxiv https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.09.25.678689v1?rss=1
Unannotated translation products are widespread in model E. coli
Genomes contain orders of magnitude more open reading frames (ORFs) than known protein coding genes, and recent work suggests there may be unannotated proteins present in even the best studied organisms. To address this gap, we used a high throughput reverse genetic toolkit to construct precise C-terminal fusions of a reporter (and control) to >120,000 ORFs in model E. coli . We found hundreds of unannotated significant hits, and individually detected >50 novel polypeptides by western blot, including ORFs within tRNA loci. Many ORFs overlap annotated genes in the sense orientation, and we found these are likely chimeric polypeptides produced by ribosomal frameshifting. Using degron based knockdowns, we identified unannotated proteins that have putative fitness effects, and we found a novel small protein that displays phenotypes consistent with a role in the mRNA degradosome. The observation of a range of unannotated translation products should lead to better annotation and understanding of the bacterial domain of life and motivates the continued exploration of genomes broadly. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
www.biorxiv.org
September 27, 2025 at 4:14 AM
After testing virtually all reasonable permutations of sample prep, spectra acquisition, database selection, data processing...

This team (convincingly, I think) demonstrates that ~85% of the small, *annotated* bacterial proteins are undetectable by mass spec—much less non-annotated ones. (1/4) 🧵
September 26, 2025 at 6:41 PM
Where do "orphan genes" in bacteria come from—and how do we know? (Do we even?)

I've been thinking about this problem over the course of my PhD, and our review paper is now out in Genome Research!

genome.cshlp.org/content/earl...

Here are some plot points (1/7) 🧵
September 25, 2025 at 6:33 PM
I was looking for this paper but couldn't remember the exact title, so I googled "effective population size for complete dumbasses" and it worked
May 27, 2025 at 7:33 PM
I got my PhD commencement at @utaustin.bsky.social before GTA 6
May 14, 2025 at 6:44 PM
If you enjoy cool science about the origin of life, join us May 13 (9 AM central time). Registration link - tinyurl.com/prose-seminar2

Having followed Dr. Hlouchová's work for a long time, I can say with confidence that this will be one of the most exciting episodes we've had yet.
May 9, 2025 at 2:04 PM
Cool new seminar series alert: in tomorrow's session (March 11, 3PM GMT), @zachary-ardern.bsky.social will be discussing long-term trends in protein structure evolution.

To sign up for the series: tinyurl.com/prose-seminar2

@lacholt.bsky.social @caro-rocha.bsky.social @claudiaalcar.bsky.social
March 10, 2025 at 8:03 PM
I don't quite understand how this happened, but I recently completed my PhD at UT Austin! On that note, I thought I should acknowledge what I think are some of the best papers in my field of research - De Novo gene birth.

@vakirlis.bsky.social @caraweisman.bsky.social @carvunis.bsky.social
March 5, 2025 at 5:29 PM
This paper from the @carvunis.bsky.social lab went under my radar for a while, likely because it seems to report "negative" results. I've since realized this is essential reading for anyone attempting to detect novel proteins using mass spectrometry. Definitely cleared up a lot of my misgivings!
February 27, 2025 at 5:10 PM