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Ewa Hughes née Wroclawska Publications
 Improving efficiencies of locus-specific DNA methylation assessment for bovine in vitro produced embryos
Wroclawska, E
Brant, JO
Yang, TP
Moore, K
Syst. Biol. Reprod. Med. 56 96-105
(2010)
 Investigating the roles of putative active site residues in the oxalate decarboxylase from Bacillus subtilis
Svedruzic, D
Liu, Y
Reinhardt, LA
Wroclawska, E
Cleland, WW
Richards, NGJ
Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 464
(1)
36-47
(2007)
<Abstract>
Oxalate decarboxylase (OxDC) catalyzes the conversion of oxalate into
CO2 and formate using a catalytic mechanism that remains poorly
understood. The Bacillus subtilis enzyme is composed of two cupin
domains, each of which contains Mn(II) coordinated by four conserved
residues. We have measured heavy atom isotope effects for a series of
Bacillus subtilis OxDC mutants in which Arg-92, Arg270, Glu-162, and
Glu-333 are conservatively substituted in an effort to define the
functional roles of these residues. This strategy has the advantage
that observed isotope effects report directly on OxDC molecules in
which the active site manganese center(s) is (are) catalytically
active. Our results support the proposal that the N-terminal Mn-binding
site can mediate catalysis, and confirm the importance of Arg-92 in
catalytic activity. On the other hand, substitution of Arg-270 and
Glu-333 affects both Mn(II) incorporation and the ability of Mn to bind
to the OxDC mutants, thereby precluding any definitive assessment of
whether the metal center in the C-terminal domain can also mediate
catalysis. New evidence for the importance of Glu-162 in controlling
metal reactivity has been provided by the unexpected observation that
the E162Q OxDC mutant exhibits a significantly increased oxalate
oxidase and a concomitant reduction in decarboxylase activities
relative to wild type OxDC. Hence the reaction specificity of a
catalytically active Mn center in OxDC can be perturbed by relatively
small changes in local protein environment, in agreement with a
proposal based on prior computational studies. (c) 2007 Elsevier Inc.
All rights reserved.
 Sequence-indexed mutations in maize using the UniformMu transposon-tagging population
Settles, AM
Holding, DR
Tan, BC
Latshaw, SP
Liu, J
Suzuki, M
Li, L
O'Brien, BA
Fajardo, DS
Wroclawska, E
Tseung, CW
Lai, JS
Hunter, CT
Avigne, WT
Baier, J
Messing, J
Hannah, LC
Koch, KE
Becraft, PW
Larkins, BA
McCarty, DR
BMC Genomics 8
(1)
116-144
(2007)
<Abstract>
Background: Gene knockouts are a critical resource for functional
genomics. In Arabidopsis, comprehensive knockout collections were
generated by amplifying and sequencing genomic DNA flanking insertion
mutants. These Flanking Sequence Tags (FSTs) map each mutant to a
specific locus within the genome. In maize, FSTs have been generated
using DNA transposons. Transposable elements can generate unstable
insertions that are difficult to analyze for simple knockout
phenotypes. Transposons can also generate somatic insertions that fail
to segregate in subsequent generations.
Results: Transposon insertion sites from 106 UniformMu FSTs were tested
for inheritance by locus-specific PCR. We confirmed 89% of the FSTs to
be germinal transposon insertions. We found no evidence for somatic
insertions within the 11% of insertion sites that were not confirmed.
Instead, this subset of insertion sites had errors in locus- specific
primer design due to incomplete or low-quality genomic sequences. The
locus-specific PCR assays identified a knockout of a 6-phosphogluconate
dehydrogenase gene that co-segregates with a seed mutant phenotype. The
mutant phenotype linked to this knockout generates novel hypotheses
about the role for the plastid-localized oxidative pentose phosphate
pathway during grain-fill.
Conclusion: We show that FSTs from the UniformMu population identify
stable, germinal insertion sites in maize. Moreover, we show that these
sequence-indexed mutations can be readily used for reverse genetic
analysis. We conclude from these data that the current collection of
1,882 non-redundant insertion sites from UniformMu provide a
genome-wide resource for reverse genetics.
 In vitro production of bovine embryos in medium supplemented with a serum replacer: Effects on blastocyst development, cryotolerance and survival to term
Moore, K
Rodriguez-Sallaberry, CJ
Kramer, JM
Johnson, S
Wroclawska, E
Goicoa, S
Niasari-Nasalaji, A
Theriogenology 68
(9)
1316-1325
(2007)
<Abstract>
In this study, we evaluated a serum replacer (SR; Knockout SO (R),
Invitrogen) in our in vitro culture systems. We hypothesized that SR
would benefit bovine embryo development, since SR supported survival of
embryonic stem cells (which originate from embryos). Experiment I
compared oocyte maturation with SR versus fetal bovine serum (FBS).
Following fertilization, blastocyst development was lower for oocytes
matured with SR (21.5 versus 34.1, P < 0.05). Experiment 2 evaluated SR
for culturing embryos. Following fertilization, embryos were cultured
for 3 days in KSOM, and then assigned to treatments: (1) KSOM static
culture (KNM); (2) fresh KSOM (KD3); (3) KSOM + SR or (4) KSOM + FBS
and cultured to Day 7 (fertilization = Day 0) Blastocyst development in
FBS or SR was higher than either KNM or KD3 (48.2, 47.2, 32.7, and
35.5, respectively, P < 0.05) Experiment 3 evaluated cryosurvival of
embryos cultured in the same manner as Experiment 2. On Day 7, embryos
were vitrified and upon warming, embryos cultured in SR had greater 24
h survival rates (70.6%) than all other treatments (P < 0.05). Finally,
Experiment 4 evaluated effects of SR on pregnancy rate and development
to term. Culture in SR was not detrimental to pregnancy or calving
rates (50 and 50%, respectively), and SR calves had normal birth
weights (mean = 38.8 kg +/- 1.5). In conclusion, the use of SR for
maturation of oocytes was not beneficial; however, SR enhanced embryo
culture by improving development in vitro, cryotolerance and survival,
effectively replacing serum in culture. (C) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All
rights reserved.
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