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489


Whole genome synthesis: from poliovirus to synthetic yeast

Dai, Junbiao; Cai, Yizhi; Yuan, Yinjing; Yang, Huanming; Boeke, Jef D.
SCOPUS:85042695700
ISSN: 2095-4689
CID: 3030842

Low escape-rate genome safeguards with minimal molecular perturbation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Agmon, Neta; Tang, Zuojian; Yang, Kun; Sutter, Ben; Ikushima, Shigehito; Cai, Yizhi; Caravelli, Katrina; Martin, James A; Sun, Xiaoji; Choi, Woo Jin; Zhang, Allen; Stracquadanio, Giovanni; Hao, Haiping; Tu, Benjamin P; Fenyo, David; Bader, Joel S; Boeke, Jef D
As the use of synthetic biology both in industry and in academia grows, there is an increasing need to ensure biocontainment. There is growing interest in engineering bacterial- and yeast-based safeguard (SG) strains. First-generation SGs were based on metabolic auxotrophy; however, the risk of cross-feeding and the cost of growth-controlling nutrients led researchers to look for other avenues. Recent strategies include bacteria engineered to be dependent on nonnatural amino acids and yeast SG strains that have both transcriptional- and recombinational-based biocontainment. We describe improving yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae-based transcriptional SG strains, which have near-WT fitness, the lowest possible escape rate, and nanomolar ligands controlling growth. We screened a library of essential genes, as well as the best-performing promoter and terminators, yielding the best SG strains in yeast. The best constructs were fine-tuned, resulting in two tightly controlled inducible systems. In addition, for potential use in the prevention of industrial espionage, we screened an array of possible "decoy molecules" that can be used to mask any proprietary supplement to the SG strain, with minimal effect on strain fitness.
PMCID:5338387
PMID: 28174266
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 2437072

A high throughput mutagenic analysis of yeast sumo structure and function

Newman, Heather A; Meluh, Pamela B; Lu, Jian; Vidal, Jeremy; Carson, Caryn; Lagesse, Elizabeth; Gray, Jeffrey J; Boeke, Jef D; Matunis, Michael J
Sumoylation regulates a wide range of essential cellular functions through diverse mechanisms that remain to be fully understood. Using S. cerevisiae, a model organism with a single essential SUMO gene (SMT3), we developed a library of >250 mutant strains with single or multiple amino acid substitutions of surface or core residues in the Smt3 protein. By screening this library using plate-based assays, we have generated a comprehensive structure-function based map of Smt3, revealing essential amino acid residues and residues critical for function under a variety of genotoxic and proteotoxic stress conditions. Functionally important residues mapped to surfaces affecting Smt3 precursor processing and deconjugation from protein substrates, covalent conjugation to protein substrates, and non-covalent interactions with E3 ligases and downstream effector proteins containing SUMO-interacting motifs. Lysine residues potentially involved in formation of polymeric chains were also investigated, revealing critical roles for polymeric chains, but redundancy in specific chain linkages. Collectively, our findings provide important insights into the molecular basis of signaling through sumoylation. Moreover, the library of Smt3 mutants represents a valuable resource for further exploring the functions of sumoylation in cellular stress response and other SUMO-dependent pathways.
PMCID:5319795
PMID: 28166236
ISSN: 1553-7404
CID: 2491912

Human transposon insertion profiling: Analysis, visualization and identification of somatic LINE-1 insertions in ovarian cancer

Tang, Zuojian; Steranka, Jared P; Ma, Sisi; Grivainis, Mark; Rodic, Nemanja; Huang, Cheng Ran Lisa; Shih, Ie-Ming; Wang, Tian-Li; Boeke, Jef D; Fenyo, David; Burns, Kathleen H
Mammalian genomes are replete with interspersed repeats reflecting the activity of transposable elements. These mobile DNAs are self-propagating, and their continued transposition is a source of both heritable structural variation as well as somatic mutation in human genomes. Tailored approaches to map these sequences are useful to identify insertion alleles. Here, we describe in detail a strategy to amplify and sequence long interspersed element-1 (LINE-1, L1) retrotransposon insertions selectively in the human genome, transposon insertion profiling by next-generation sequencing (TIPseq). We also report the development of a machine-learning-based computational pipeline, TIPseqHunter, to identify insertion sites with high precision and reliability. We demonstrate the utility of this approach to detect somatic retrotransposition events in high-grade ovarian serous carcinoma.
PMCID:5293032
PMID: 28096347
ISSN: 1091-6490
CID: 2413842

The State of Systems Genetics in 2017

Baliga, Nitin S; Bjorkegren, Johan L M; Boeke, Jef D; Boutros, Michael; Crawford, Nigel P S; Dudley, Aimee M; Farber, Charles R; Jones, Allan; Levey, Allan I; Lusis, Aldons J; Mak, H Craig; Nadeau, Joseph H; Noyes, Marcus B; Petretto, Enrico; Seyfried, Nicholas T; Steinmetz, Lars M; Vonesch, Sibylle C
Cell Systems invited 16 experts to share their views on the field of systems genetics. In questions repeated in the headings, we asked them to define systems genetics, highlight its relevance to researchers outside the field, discuss what makes a strong systems genetics paper, and paint a picture of where the field is heading in the coming years. Their responses, ordered by the journal but otherwise unedited, make it clear that deciphering genotype to phenotype relationships is a central challenge of systems genetics and will require understanding how networks and higher-order properties of biological systems underlie complex traits. In addition, our experts illuminate the applications and relevance of systems genetics to human disease, the gut microbiome, development of tools that connect the global research community, sustainability, drug discovery, patient-specific disease and network models, and personalized treatments. Finally, a table of suggested reading provides a sample of influential work in the field.
PMID: 28125793
ISSN: 2405-4712
CID: 2418642

The dynamic landscape of fission yeast meiosis alternative-splice isoforms

Kuang, Zheng; Boeke, Jef D; Canzar, Stefan
Alternative splicing increases the diversity of transcriptomes and proteomes in metazoans. The extent to which alternative splicing is active and functional in unicellular organisms is less understood. Here we exploit a single-molecule long-read sequencing technique and develop an open-source software program called SpliceHunter to characterize the transcriptome in the meiosis of fission yeast. We reveal 14353 alternative splicing events in 17669 novel isoforms at different stages of meiosis, including antisense and read-through transcripts. Intron retention is the major type of alternative splicing, followed by alternate 'intron in exon'. 770 novel transcription units are detected; 53 of the predicted proteins show homology in other species and form theoretical stable structures. We report the complexity of alternative splicing along isoforms, including 683 intramolecularly co-associated intron pairs. We compare the dynamics of novel isoforms based on the number of supporting full-length reads with those of annotated isoforms and explore the translational capacity and quality of novel isoforms. The evaluation of these factors indicates that the majority of novel isoforms are unlikely to be both condition-specific and translatable but consistent with the possibility of biologically functional novel isoforms. Moreover, the co-option of these unusual transcripts into newly born genes seems likely. Together, this study highlights the diversity and dynamics at the isoform level in the sexual development of fission yeast.
PMCID:5204338
PMID: 27856494
ISSN: 1549-5469
CID: 2311012

Dynamic silencing of somatic L1 retrotransposon insertions reflects the developmental and cellular contexts of their genomic integration

Kannan, Manoj; Li, Jingfeng; Fritz, Sarah E; Husarek, Kathryn E; Sanford, Jonathan C; Sullivan, Teresa L; Tiwary, Pawan Kumar; An, Wenfeng; Boeke, Jef D; Symer, David E
BACKGROUND: The ongoing mobilization of mammalian transposable elements (TEs) contributes to natural genetic variation. To survey the epigenetic control and expression of reporter genes inserted by L1 retrotransposition in diverse cellular and genomic contexts, we engineered highly sensitive, real-time L1 retrotransposon reporter constructs. RESULTS: Here we describe different patterns of expression and epigenetic controls of newly inserted sequences retrotransposed by L1 in various somatic cells and tissues including cultured human cancer cells, mouse embryonic stem cells, and tissues of pseudofounder transgenic mice and their progeny. In cancer cell lines, the newly inserted sequences typically underwent rapid transcriptional gene silencing, but they lacked cytosine methylation even after many cell divisions. L1 reporter expression was reversible and oscillated frequently. Silenced or variegated reporter expression was strongly and uniformly reactivated by treatment with inhibitors of histone deacetylation, revealing the mechanism for their silencing. By contrast, de novo integrants retrotransposed by L1 in pluripotent mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells underwent rapid silencing by dense cytosine methylation. Similarly, de novo cytosine methylation also was identified at new integrants when studied in several distinct somatic tissues of adult founder mice. Pre-existing L1 elements in cultured human cancer cells were stably silenced by dense cytosine methylation, whereas their transcription modestly increased when cytosine methylation was experimentally reduced in cells lacking DNA methyltransferases DNMT1 and DNMT3b. As a control, reporter genes mobilized by piggyBac (PB), a DNA transposon, revealed relatively stable and robust expression without apparent silencing in both cultured cancer cells and ES cells. CONCLUSIONS: We hypothesize that the de novo methylation marks at newly inserted sequences retrotransposed by L1 in early pre-implantation development are maintained or re-established in adult somatic tissues. By contrast, histone deacetylation reversibly silences L1 reporter insertions that had mobilized at later timepoints in somatic development and differentiation, e.g., in cancer cell lines. We conclude that the cellular contexts of L1 retrotransposition can determine expression or silencing of newly integrated sequences. We propose a model whereby reporter expression from somatic TE insertions reflects the timing, molecular mechanism, epigenetic controls and the genomic, cellular and developmental contexts of their integration.
PMCID:5424313
PMID: 28491150
ISSN: 1759-8753
CID: 2549082

URI Regulates KAP1 Phosphorylation and Transcriptional Repression Via PP2A Phosphatase in Prostate Cancer Cells

Mita, Paolo; Savas, Jeffrey N; Briggs, Erica M; Ha, Susan; Gnanakkan, Veena; Yates, John R 3rd; Robins, Diane M; David, Gregory; Boeke, Jef D; Garabedian, Michael J; Logan, Susan K
URI is an unconventional prefoldin, RNA polymerase II interactor that functions as a transcriptional repressor, and is part of a larger nuclear protein complex. The components of this complex and the mechanism of transcriptional repression have not been characterized. Here we show that the KRAB-associated protein 1 (KAP1) and the protein phosphatase PP2A interact with URI. Mechanistically, we show that KAP1 phosphorylation is decreased following recruitment of PP2A by URI. We functionally characterize the novel URI-KAP1-PP2A complex, demonstrating a role of URI in retrotransposon repression, a key function previously demonstrated for the KAP1-SETDB1 complex. Microarray analysis of annotated transposons revealed a selective increase in the transcription of LINE-1 and L1PA2 retroelements upon knockdown of URI. These data unveil a new nuclear function of URI and identify a novel post-transcriptional regulation of KAP1 protein that may have important implications in reactivation of transposable elements in prostate cancer cells.
PMCID:5207251
PMID: 27780869
ISSN: 1083-351x
CID: 2288712

BioPartsDB: a synthetic biology workflow web-application for education and research

Stracquadanio, Giovanni; Yang, Kun; Boeke, Jef D; Bader, Joel S
Synthetic biology has become a widely-used technology, and expanding applications in research, education, and industry require progress tracking for team-based DNA synthesis projects. Although some vendors are beginning to supply multi-kilobase sequence-verified constructs, synthesis workflows starting with short oligos remain important for cost savings and pedagogical benefit. We developed BioPartsDB as an open-source, extendable workflow management system for synthetic biology projects with entry points for oligos and larger DNA constructs and ending with sequence-verified clones. AVAILABILITY: BioPartsDB is released under the MIT license and available for download at https://github.com/baderzone/biopartsdb Additional documentation and video tutorials are available at https://github.com/baderzone/biopartsdb/wiki An Amazon Web Services image is available from the AWS Market Place (ami-a01d07c8). CONTACT: joel.bader@jhu.edu.
PMCID:5181553
PMID: 27412090
ISSN: 1367-4811
CID: 2179772

Meeting Report: The Role of the Mobilome in Cancer

Ardeljan, Daniel; Taylor, Martin S; Burns, Kathleen H; Boeke, Jef D; Espey, Michael Graham; Woodhouse, Elisa C; Howcroft, Thomas Kevin
Approximately half of the human genome consists of repetitive sequence attributed to the activities of mobile DNAs, including DNA transposons, RNA transposons, and endogenous retroviruses. Of these, only long interspersed elements (LINE-1 or L1) and sequences copied by LINE-1 remain mobile in our species today. Although cells restrict L1 activity by both transcriptional and posttranscriptional mechanisms, L1 derepression occurs in developmental and pathologic contexts, including many types of cancers. However, we have limited knowledge of the extent and consequences of L1 expression in premalignancies and cancer. Participants in this NIH strategic workshop considered key questions to enhance our understanding of mechanisms and roles the mobilome may play in cancer biology. Cancer Res; 76(15); 4316-9. (c)2016 AACR.
PMCID:4991632
PMID: 27527733
ISSN: 1538-7445
CID: 2218852