BIO Assignment 2 2011

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Assignment 2 - Search, retrieve and annnotate

Note: This assignment is currently inactive. Unannounced changes may be made at any time.

Introduction

Baker's yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, is perhaps the most important model organism since it is a eukaryote that has been studied genetically and biochemically in great detail for many decades and it is easily manipulated with high-throughput experimental methods. We will use information from this model organism to study the conservation of function and sequence in other fungi whose genomes have been completely sequenced. This and the following assignments will revolve around a transcription factor that plays an important role in the regulation of the cell cycle: Mbp1, a key component of the MBF complex (Mbp1/Swi6) that regulates gene expression at the crucial G1/S-phase transition of the mitotic cell cycle and has been shown to bind to the regulatory regions of more than a hundred target genes.

One would assume that such control machinery would be conserved in other fungi and it will be your task in these assignments to collect evidence whether related molecular machinery is present in some of the newly sequenced fungal genomes.

(If you need to brush up on the concepts mentioned above, you could study the corresponding chapter in Lodish's Molecular Cell Biology. It is not strictly necessary to understand the details of the yeast cell-cycle to complete the assignments, but highly recommended, if this all is to make some sense.)

In this particular assignment you will go on a search and retrieve mission for information and annotation of Mbp1 homologues in a fungal genome, using common public databases and Web resources.


Preparation, submission and due date

Read carefully. Be sure you have understood all parts of the assignment and cover all questions in your answers! Sadly, we always get assignments back in which important aspects have simply been overlooked and marks are unnecessarily lost. Sadly, we always get assignments back in which important aspects have simply been overlooked and marks are unnecessarily lost. If you did not notice that the above sentence was repeated, you are not reading carefully enough.

Prepare a Microsoft Word document with a title page that contains:

  • your full name
  • your Student ID
  • your e-mail address
  • the organism name you have been assigned (see below)

Follow the steps outlined below. You are encouraged to write your answers in short answer form or point form, like you would document an analysis in a laboratory notebook. However, you must

  • document what you have done,
  • note what Web sites and tools you have used,
  • paste important data sequences, alignments, information etc.

If you do not document the process of your work, we will deduct marks. Try to be concise, not wordy! Use your judgement: are you giving us enough information so we could exectly reproduce what you have done?

Write your answers into separate paragraphs and give each its title. Save your document with a filename of: A2_{lastname}.{firstname}.doc (for example my first assignment would be named: A2_steipe.boris.doc - and don't include the brackets this time, please!)

Finally e-mail the document to [boris.steipe@utoronto.ca] before the due date.

Your document must not contain macros. Please turn off and/or remove all macros from your Word document; we will disable macros, since they pose a security risk.

With the number of students in the course, we have to economize on processing the assignments. Thus we will not accept assignments that are not prepared as described above. If you have technical difficulties, contact me.

The due date for the assignment is Thursday, October 19. at 10:00 in the morning.

Grading

Don't wait until the last day to find out there are problems! Assignments that are received past the due date will have one mark deducted at the first minute of every twelve hour period past the due date. Assignments received more than 5 days past the due date will not be assessed.

Marks are noted below in the section headings for of the tasks. A total of 10 marks will be awarded, if your assignment answers all of the questions. A total of 2 bonus marks (up to a maximum of 10 overall) can be awarded for particularily interesting findings, or insightful comments. A total of 2 marks can be subtracted for lack of form or for glaring errors. The marks you receive will

  • count directly towards your final marks at the end of term, for BCH441 (undergraduates), or
  • be divided by two for BCH1441 (graduates).

   


Retrieve

   

The Genome (1 mark)



APSES domain transcription factors (1 mark)


Align

   

Sequences and accession numbers (1 mark)


Sequence alignment (1 mark)


Analyse

   

Sequence annotation (2 marks)


Homologous structure (1 mark)


DNA binding site (3 marks)


[End of assignment]

If you have any questions at all, don't hesitate to mail me at boris.steipe@utoronto.ca or post your question to the Course Mailing List