Open-source investigation into ribosomal DNA/RNA variation in humans
Loss of macpΨ ribosomal RNA modification is a major feature of cancer.
Intra- and Inter-individual Genetic Variation in Human Ribosomal RNAs.
rDNA is variable across loci/copies rDNA is mutable in cancer rDNA mutations will result in altered ribosomal function Mutated rDNA represent a potential gain/loss of function onco-ribosomes mechanism
./Crown/wiki/Home.md: Index file for notebooks
./Crown/scripts/
:
Analysis scripts for Crown
- PROTOCOL: amino-carboxyl-propyl Reverse Transcriptase (aRT)-PCR
- 100 Genomes (GVCF) (XLS)
- 100 Genomes hgr1-aligned BAM
- hgr1 reference sequence (fasta) (annotation)
These are some of the open questions regarding rDNA variation. If you think you can take one on then join the project and give it a stab. Open and unrestricted collaboration.
- How many distinct human haplotypes are there of RNA45S and the rDNA repeat? What's the phasing?
- How does the human rDNA variation compare to other organisms?
- What is the mode of inheritence of rDNA variation?
- How rapid is the process of homogenization? Can resistence to homogenization then be measured?
- How can purifying / balancing selection be measured within rDNA?
- Does a persons distinct set of ribosomal variants influence how their cells interpret the genome?
- Are there rare variants or allelic imbalances in variants leading to ribosomopathy in humans?
- Are similar variants localized to the same molecule (cis), the same chromosome (trans) or ad-mixed?
- Is there tissue-specific expression of certain rRNA variants?
- What's the biochemical consequence of 28S.A59G? 1b. Do the A and G alleles segregate between monosomes and polysomes?
- What's the biochemical consequence of the other variants within mature rRNA?
- How many distinct human haplotypes are there of RNA45S and the rDNA repeat? What's the phasing?
- Will a variant-aware aligner increase sensitivity for alignment and variant calling?
- How can the internet be leveraged to share and collaborate on data and experiments?
email: ababaian [AT] bccrc [DOT] ca