@phdthesis{Sharan2017, author = {Sharan, Malvika}, title = {Bio-computational identification and characterization of RNA-binding proteins in bacteria}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-153573}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) have been extensively studied in eukaryotes, where they post-transcriptionally regulate many cellular events including RNA transport, translation, and stability. Experimental techniques, such as cross-linking and co-purification followed by either mass spectrometry or RNA sequencing has enabled the identification and characterization of RBPs, their conserved RNA-binding domains (RBDs), and the regulatory roles of these proteins on a genome-wide scale. These developments in quantitative, high-resolution, and high-throughput screening techniques have greatly expanded our understanding of RBPs in human and yeast cells. In contrast, our knowledge of number and potential diversity of RBPs in bacteria is comparatively poor, in part due to the technical challenges associated with existing global screening approaches developed in eukaryotes. Genome- and proteome-wide screening approaches performed in silico may circumvent these technical issues to obtain a broad picture of the RNA interactome of bacteria and identify strong RBP candidates for more detailed experimental study. Here, I report APRICOT ("Analyzing Protein RNA Interaction by Combined Output Technique"), a computational pipeline for the sequence-based identification and characterization of candidate RNA-binding proteins encoded in the genomes of all domains of life using RBDs known from experimental studies. The pipeline identifies functional motifs in protein sequences of an input proteome using position-specific scoring matrices and hidden Markov models of all conserved domains available in the databases and then statistically score them based on a series of sequence-based features. Subsequently, APRICOT identifies putative RBPs and characterizes them according to functionally relevant structural properties. APRICOT performed better than other existing tools for the sequence-based prediction on the known RBP data sets. The applications and adaptability of the software was demonstrated on several large bacterial RBP data sets including the complete proteome of Salmonella Typhimurium strain SL1344. APRICOT reported 1068 Salmonella proteins as RBP candidates, which were subsequently categorized using the RBDs that have been reported in both eukaryotic and bacterial proteins. A set of 131 strong RBP candidates was selected for experimental confirmation and characterization of RNA-binding activity using RNA co-immunoprecipitation followed by high-throughput sequencing (RIP-Seq) experiments. Based on the relative abundance of transcripts across the RIP-Seq libraries, a catalogue of enriched genes was established for each candidate, which shows the RNA-binding potential of 90\% of these proteins. Furthermore, the direct targets of few of these putative RBPs were validated by means of cross-linking and co-immunoprecipitation (CLIP) experiments. This thesis presents the computational pipeline APRICOT for the global screening of protein primary sequences for potential RBPs in bacteria using RBD information from all kingdoms of life. Furthermore, it provides the first bio-computational resource of putative RBPs in Salmonella, which could now be further studied for their biological and regulatory roles. The command line tool and its documentation are available at https://malvikasharan.github.io/APRICOT/.}, language = {en} }