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Toward a comprehensive temperature-sensitive mutant repository of the essential genes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Ben-Aroya, Shay; Coombes, Candice; Kwok, Teresa; O'Donnell, Kathryn A; Boeke, Jef D; Hieter, Philip
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene deletion project revealed that approximately 20% of yeast genes are required for viability. The analysis of essential genes traditionally relies on conditional mutants, typically temperature-sensitive (ts) alleles. We developed a systematic approach (termed "diploid shuffle") useful for generating a ts allele for each essential gene in S. cerevisiae and for improved genetic manipulation of mutant alleles and gene constructs in general. Importantly, each ts allele resides at its normal genomic locus, flanked by specific cognate UPTAG and DNTAG bar codes. A subset of 250 ts mutants, including ts alleles for all uncharacterized essential genes and prioritized for genes with human counterparts, is now ready for distribution. The importance of this collection is demonstrated by biochemical and genetic screens that reveal essential genes involved in RNA processing and maintenance of chromosomal stability.
PMCID:4130347
PMID: 18439903
ISSN: 1097-2765
CID: 572092
Domesticated DNA transposon proteins mediate retrotransposon control
O'Donnell, Kathryn A; Boeke, Jef D
PMCID:2654211
PMID: 18311163
ISSN: 1001-0602
CID: 572112
Plasmid-chromosome shuffling for non-deletion alleles in yeast
Huang, Zhiwei; Sucgang, Richard S; Lin, Yu-yi; Shi, Xiaomin; Boeke, Jef D; Pan, Xuewen
Here we describe a facile plasmid-chromosome shuffling technique for generating and analyzing non-deletion alleles in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This technique takes advantage of an existing set of genome-wide haploid-convertible heterozygous diploid yeast knockout mutants. This simple method will facilitate characterization of essential gene functions and genome-wide investigation of protein structure-function relationships.
PMID: 18193055
ISSN: 1548-7091
CID: 572132
Analysis of genetic interactions on a genome-wide scale in budding yeast: diploid-based synthetic lethality analysis by microarray
Meluh, Pamela B; Pan, Xuewen; Yuan, Daniel S; Tiffany, Carol; Chen, Ou; Sookhai-Mahadeo, Sharon; Wang, Xiaoling; Peyser, Brian D; Irizarry, Rafael; Spencer, Forrest A; Boeke, Jef D
Comprehensive collections of open reading frame (ORF) deletion mutant strains exist for the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. With great prescience, these strains were designed with short molecular bar codes or TAGs that uniquely mark each deletion allele, flanked by shared priming sequences. These features have enabled researchers to handle yeast mutant collections as complex pools of approximately 6000 strains. The presence of any individual mutant within a pool can be assessed indirectly by measuring the relative abundance of its corresponding TAG(s) in genomic DNA prepared from the pool. This is readily accomplished by wholesale polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of the TAGs using fluorescent oligonucleotide primers that recognize the common flanking sequences, followed by hybridization of the labeled PCR products to a TAG oligonucleotide microarray. Here we describe a method-diploid-based synthetic lethality analysis by microarray (dSLAM)-whereby such pools can be manipulated to rapidly construct and assess the fitness of 6000 double-mutant strains in a single experiment. Analysis of double-mutant strains is of growing importance in defining the spectrum of essential cellular functionalities and in understanding how these functionalities interrelate.
PMID: 18392971
ISSN: 1064-3745
CID: 572102
Great exaptations
Burns, Kathleen H; Boeke, Jef D
Long interspersed nuclear elements (LINEs) are among the most successful parasitic genetic sequences in higher organisms. Recent work has discovered many instances of LINE incorporation into exons, reminding us of the hazards they pose to genes in their vicinity as well as their potential to be co-opted for the host's purposes.
PMCID:2263120
PMID: 18279541
ISSN: 1475-4924
CID: 572122
Retrotransposons - Natural and synthetic
Boeke, Jef D.; An, Wenfeng; Dai, Lixin; Davis, Edward S.; Han, Jeffrey S.; O'Donnell, Kathryn A.; Scheifele, Lisa Z.; Wheelan, Sarah J.
BIOSIS:PREV200800339516
ISSN: 0945-6082
CID: 616732
A critical role for the C-terminus of Nej1 protein in Lif1p association, DNA binding and non-homologous end-joining
Boeke, JD; Stoye, JP; Sulek, M; Yarrington, R; McGibbon, G; Boeke, J D; Junop, M
A predominant pathway implicated in repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) is the evolutionarily conserved non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) pathway. Among the major constituents of this pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is Nej1p, for which a biochemical function has yet to be determined. In this work we demonstrate that Nej1p exhibits a DNA binding activity (KD approximately 1.8 microM) comparable to Lif1p. Although binding is enhanced with larger substrates (>300 bp), short approximately 20 bp substrates can suffice. This DNA binding activity is the first biochemical evidence supporting the idea that Nej1p plays a direct role in the repair of double-strand breaks. The C-terminus of Nej1p is required for interaction with Lif1p and is sufficient for DNA binding. Structural characterization reveals that Nej1p exists as a dimer, and that residues 1-244 are sufficient for dimer formation. Nej1p (aa 1-244) is shown to be defective in end-joining in vivo. Preliminary functional and structural studies on the Nej1p-Lif1p complex suggest that the proteins stably co-purify and the complex binds DNA with a higher affinity than each independent component. The significance of these results is discussed with reference to current literature on Nej1p and other end-joining factors (mammalian and yeast), specifically the recently identified putative mammalian homologue of Nej1p, XLF/Cernunnos.
PMID: 17765666
ISSN: 1568-7856
CID: 615362
Mn2+ suppressor mutations and biochemical communication between Ty1 reverse transcriptase and RNase H domains
Yarrington, Robert M; Chen, Jichao; Bolton, Eric C; Boeke, Jef D
Ty1 reverse transcriptase/RNase H (RT/RH) is exquisitely sensitive to manganese concentrations. Elevated intracellular free Mn(2+) inhibits Ty1 retrotransposition and in vitro Ty1 RT-polymerizing activity. Furthermore, Mn(2+) inhibition is not limited to the Ty1 RT, as this ion similarly inhibits the activities of both avian myeloblastosis virus and human immunodeficiency virus type 1 RTs. To further characterize Mn(2+) inhibition, we generated RT/RH suppressor mutants capable of increased Ty1 transposition in pmr1 Delta cells. PMR1 codes for a P-type ATPase that regulates intracellular calcium and manganese ion homeostasis, and pmr1 mutants accumulate elevated intracellular manganese levels and display 100-fold less transposition than PMR1(+) cells. Mapping of these suppressor mutations revealed, surprisingly, that suppressor point mutations localize not to the RT itself but to the RH domain of the protein. Furthermore, Mn(2+) inhibition of in vitro RT activity is greatly reduced in all the suppressor mutants, whereas RH activity and cleavage specificity remain largely unchanged. These intriguing results reveal that the effect of these suppressor mutations is transmitted to the polymerase domain and suggest biochemical communication between these two domains during reverse transcription.
PMCID:1951463
PMID: 17537863
ISSN: 0022-538x
CID: 572152
Efficient Tor signaling requires a functional class C Vps protein complex in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Zurita-Martinez, Sara A; Puria, Rekha; Pan, Xuewen; Boeke, Jef D; Cardenas, Maria E
The Tor kinases regulate responses to nutrients and control cell growth. Unlike most organisms that only contain one Tor protein, Saccharomyces cerevisiae expresses two, Tor1 and Tor2, which are thought to share all of the rapamycin-sensitive functions attributable to Tor signaling. Here we conducted a genetic screen that defined the global TOR1 synthetic fitness or lethal interaction gene network. This screen identified mutations in distinctive functional categories that impaired vacuolar function, including components of the EGO/Gse and PAS complexes that reduce fitness. In addition, tor1 is lethal in combination with mutations in class C Vps complex components. We find that Tor1 does not regulate the known function of the class C Vps complex in protein sorting. Instead class C vps mutants fail to recover from rapamycin-induced growth arrest or to survive nitrogen starvation and have low levels of amino acids. Remarkably, addition of glutamate or glutamine restores viability to a tor1 pep3 mutant strain. We conclude that Tor1 is more effective than Tor2 at providing rapamycin-sensitive Tor signaling under conditions of amino acid limitation, and that an intact class C Vps complex is required to mediate intracellular amino acid homeostasis for efficient Tor signaling.
PMCID:1950620
PMID: 17565946
ISSN: 0016-6731
CID: 572142
Mighty Piwis defend the germline against genome intruders
O'Donnell, Kathryn A; Boeke, Jef D
Piwis are a germline-specific subclass of the Argonaute family of RNA interference (RNAi) effector proteins that are associated with a recently discovered group of small RNAs (piRNAs). Recent studies in Drosophila and zebrafish directly implicate Piwi proteins in piRNA biogenesis to maintain transposon silencing in the germline genome (Brennecke et al., 2007; Gunawardane et al., 2007; Houwing et al., 2007). This function may be conserved in mice as loss of Miwi2, a mouse Piwi homolog, leads to germline stem cell and meiotic defects correlated with increased transposon activity (Carmell et al., 2007).
PMCID:4122227
PMID: 17418784
ISSN: 0092-8674
CID: 572162