To determine if the disruption of the MMR pathway results in the reduced conservation of methylated adenines as well as an increased tolerance for mutations that result in the loss or gain of new GATC sites, we surveyed individual clones isolated from experimentally evolving wild-type and MMR-deficient (mutL- ;conferring an 150x increase in mutation rate) populations of E. coli with whole-genome sequencing. Initial analysis revealed a lack of mutations affecting methylation sites (GATC tetranucleotides) in wild-type clones. However, the inherent low mutation rates conferred by the wild-type background render this result inconclusive, due to a lack of statistical power, and reveal a need for a more direct measure of changes in methylation status. Thus as a first step to comparative methylomics, we benchmarked four different methylation-calling pipelines on three biological replicates of the wildtype progenitor strain for our evolved populations.
While it is understood that these methylated sites play a role in the MMR pathway, it is not fully understood the full extent of their effect on the genome. Thus the goal of this thesis was to better understand the forces which maintain the genome, specifically concerning m6A within the GATC motif.
The transcriptome of an organism is a collection of the various messenger RNAs that the genes of an organism produce. As the level of gene expression is different between different tissues of an organism, understanding the transcriptome serves as a way to better understand the differences between the functions and abilities of tissues and cells in an organism. This understanding of the transcriptome can aid further research in targeted disease treatments and indentifying new biomarkers. This study aims to gather the transcriptome from various tissues of the organism Daphnia pulex. This will be done by using a combination of single cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), which involves the isolation and sequencing of single cells, and single nuclei RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq), which involves the isolation and sequencing of single nuclei. Here we show the viability of isolating single cells and single nuclei from various Daphnia pulex tissues using different techniques and enzymes including trypLE, trypsin EDTA, accutase, etc by using microscopy and automatic cell counting. The results show that each tissue is best isolated using different techniques.