Steve Baker
@sfbkr.bsky.social
48 followers 97 following 4 posts
Baker Lab | Lovelace Biomedical | ABQ, NM Influenza and alternative RNA splicing
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Reposted by Steve Baker
hanckslab.bsky.social
Switches: New..lots of protein-coding mRNAs encode #miRNA ..former Ph.D. student's last hurrah building on our #mitochondria C15orf48/miR-147b stuff bmcgenomics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10....
A subclass of small RNAs is encoded by exons of protein-coding genes - BMC Genomics
Background Small RNAs regulate gene expression in species across the tree of life. miRNAs, which impact a variety of cellular and physiological processes ranging from development and stress adaptation to host defense, are one of the best characterized classes of small RNA. Many miRNAs are produced from longer non-coding transcripts generated from host genes via a series of RNA cleavage reactions. The location of a small RNA within a host gene can shape the processing of the mature small RNA. For example, a type of miRNAs derived from host gene intronic sequence, referred to as miRtrons, are Drosha-independent and reliant on splicing for biogenesis. Relatedly, processing of a small RNA from an exon of a protein-coding mRNA, in principle, may destabilize it and compromise translation of the host gene. Prior to extensive transcriptome analysis, informatics analyses identified six human miRNAs embedded in exons of protein-coding genes and experimental studies have characterized additional anecdotal examples. Still, whether protein-coding mRNAs encoding small RNAs represent an appreciable class of host genes given the now recognized complexity of the transcriptome is unclear. Results Our analysis finds 201 small RNAs (118 human and 83 mouse) encoded by expressed exons of protein-coding genes (5’-UTR, CDS, 3’-UTR). Forty-six of these cases (29 human and 17 mouse) are also present in MirGeneDB which includes the most up-to-date miRNA classifications. Many of these small RNAs are poorly characterized with 96% of the protein-coding host gene relationships identified here not previously known. Furthermore, the identification of nearly fifty human and mouse small RNAs embedded within coding exons of canonical ORFs suggests that overlapping hybrid genes might be more common than previously appreciated in higher organisms. Expression analysis for a subset of these small RNAs indicates that many display differential expression across human tissues with the pattern correlating significantly with the expression of the candidate protein-coding host gene. Significance Overall, our analysis suggests that the number of protein-coding transcripts serving as host genes is greater than previously recognized. Our small RNA host gene classifications may serve as a resource to shed new light on small RNA biology, specific host genes, and gene regulation.
bmcgenomics.biomedcentral.com
sfbkr.bsky.social
Preprint on tandem split-GFP influenza viruses is now up! We strung 7 copies of GFP11 together to make a bright virus with minimal fitness defects. Fluorescence requires GFP1-10 from cells, so we made a few that are relevant for flu. See this fluorescent love story: www.biorxiv.org/cgi/content/...
a bald man in a blue suit is making a face .
ALT: a bald man in a blue suit is making a face .
media.tenor.com
Reposted by Steve Baker
eakarlsson.bsky.social
**JOBS ALERT**

The Virology Unit at @PasteurCambodia
hiring 1 Scientist and 2 Postdocs to join our fast-moving, field-connected, research-driven team on emerging viruses and zoonoses.

🧪🧬🥼🦠🔬🐓💉🦇😷

Limited time to apply — and we need people to start ASAP.**👇
Reposted by Steve Baker
thijskuiken.bsky.social
For those interested, my lecture for the University of Sydney Infectious Diseases Institute “The global expansion of H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza” is available here on YouTube. It is from May 2024, but is still pertinent.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=ImFD...
The global expansion of H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza - Prof Thijs Kuiken
YouTube video by Sydney Infectious Diseases Institute
www.youtube.com
sfbkr.bsky.social
Nobody ever talks about the Teenage Wildtype Ninja Turtles #MacysThanksgivingDayParade
Reposted by Steve Baker
socialinfluenza.bsky.social
Do you want to become a virologist?
The @CVRinfo PhD programme is now recruiting for both UK and international applicants - rotate in two labs then choose a project tailored to your interests.
Also you get to live in Glasgow, which is fab.
Please RT!
www.findaphd.com/phds/program...
A photo of the Sir Michael Stoker Building, a research centre housed inside a golden metal cube, against the parkland of the Garscube campus as the sun rise lights up the clouds above the Campsie Fells. Image Credit: Rob Gifford.
sfbkr.bsky.social
Ah I’ll look into GoodNotes. The PDF reader needs to be A+, that’s the most important feature. Paperpile lets you read PDFs in dark mode 🤯 so it might be hard to beat.
sfbkr.bsky.social
Looking for a good PDF reader app that will sync library across devices and allow for simple annotation. I don't need the reference manager aspect. Is there anything better than Paperpile?