Browsing by Subject "S. cerevisiae"
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Item Open Access Mapping of UV-Induced Mitotic Recombination in Yeast(2015) Yin, YiIn diploid yeast cells, mitotic recombination is very important for repairing double-strand breaks (DSB). When repair of a DSB results in crossovers, it may cause loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of markers centromere-distal to the DSB in both daughter cells. Gene conversion events unassociated with crossovers cause LOH for an interstitial section of a chromosome. Alternatively, DSBs can initiate break-induced replication (BIR), causing LOH in only one of the daughter cells. Mapping mitotic LOH contributes to understanding of mechanisms for repairing DSBs and distribution of these recombinogenic lesions. Methods for selecting mitotic crossovers and mapping the positions of crossovers have recently been developed in our lab. Our current approach uses a diploid yeast strain that is heterozygous for about 55,000 SNPs, and employs SNP-Microarrays to map LOH events throughout the genome. These methods allow us to examine selected crossovers on chromosome V and unselected mitotic recombination events (crossovers, gene conversion events unassociated with crossovers, and BIR events) at about 1 kb resolution across the genome.
Mitotic recombination can be greatly induced by UV radiation. However, prior to my research, the nature of the recombinogenic lesions and the distribution of UV-induced recombination events were relatively uncharacterized. Using SNP microarrays, we constructed maps of UV-induced LOH events in G1-synchronized cells. Mitotic crossovers were stimulated 1500-fold and 8500-fold by UV doses of 1 J/m2 and 15 J/m2, respectively, compared to spontaneous events. Additionally, cells treated with 15 J/m2 have about eight unselected LOH events per pair of sectors, including gene conversions associated and unassociated with crossovers as well as BIR events. These unselected LOH events are distributed randomly throughout the genome with no particular hotspots; however, the rDNA cluster was under-represented for the initiation of crossover and BIR events. Interestingly, we found that a high fraction of recombination events in cells treated with 15 J/m2 reflected repair of two sister chromatids broken at roughly the same position. In cells treated with 1 J/m2, most events reflect repair of a single broken sister chromatid (Chapter 2).
The primary pathway to remove pyrimidine dimers introduced by UV is the nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway. In NER, the dimer is excised to generate a 30-nucleotide gap that can be replicated to form DSBs if not filled in before DNA replication. The NER gap can also be expanded by Exo1p to form single stranded gaps greater than one kilobase. Alternatively, in the absence of NER, unexcised dimers could result in blocks of DNA replication forks. Resolving the stalled replication fork could lead to recombinogenic breaks. In Chapter 3 and Chapter 4, we analyzed recombination events in strains defective in various steps of processing of UV-induced DNA damage, including exo1 and rad14 mutants.
In Chapter 3, I show that Exo1p-expanded NER gaps contribute to UV-induced recombination events. Interestingly, I also found that Exo1p is also required for the hotspot activity of a spontaneous crossover hotspot involving a pair of inverted Ty repeats. In addition to its role of expanding a nick to a long single-stranded gap, Exo1p is also a major player in DSB end resection. Therefore, I examined the gene conversion tract lengths in strains deleted for EXO1. I found that, although crossover-associated gene conversion tracts become shorter in the exo1 mutant as expected, noncrossover tract lengths remained unaffected. As a result, noncrossover tracts are longer than crossover tracts in the exo1 mutant while the opposite result was observed in the wild-type strains. I proposed models to rationalize this observation.
In Chapter 4, to investigate whether the substantial recombinogenic effect in UV in G1-synchronized cells requires NER, we mapped UV-induced LOH events in NER-deficient rad14 diploids treated with 1 J/m2. Mitotic recombination between homologs was greatly stimulated, which suggests that dimers themselves can also cause recombination without processing by NER. We further show that UV-induced inter-homolog recombination events (noncrossover, crossover and BIR) depend on the resolvase Mus81p, and are suppressed by Mms2p-mediated error-free post-replication repair pathway.
The research described in Chapters, 2, 3, and 4 are in the publications Yin and Petes (2013), Yin and Petes (2014), and Yin and Petes (2015), respectively.
Item Open Access Mechanisms of Gradient Tracking During Yeast Mating(2012) Johnson, Jayme MMany cells are remarkably proficient at tracking even shallow chemical gradients, despite tiny differences in receptor occupancy across the cell. Stochastic receptor-ligand interactions introduce considerable noise in instantaneous receptor occupancy, so it is thought that spatial information must be integrated over time to allow noise filtering. The mechanism of temporal integration is unknown. We used the mating response of the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, as a model to study eukaryotic gradient tracking.
During mating, yeast cells polarize and grow up a gradient of pheromone to find and fuse with opposite-sex partners. Exposure to pheromone causes polarity regulators to cluster into a tight "patch" at the cortex, directing growth toward that site. Timelapse microscopy of fluorescently-labeled polarity proteins revealed that the patch wandered around the cortex during gradient tracking. Mathematical modeling and genetic analysis suggested that fusion of vesicles near the polarization site could perturb the polarity patch and promote wandering. Wandering is decreased due to global effects from pheromone signaling as well as interactions between receptor-activated Gβ and the exchange factor for the polarity regulator Cdc42. We found that artificially stabilizing patch wandering impaired accurate gradient tracking.
We suggest that ongoing polarized vesicle traffic causes patch wandering, which is locally reduced by pheromone-bound receptors. Thus, over time, spatial information from the pheromone gradient biases the random wandering of the polarity patch so that growth occurs predominantly up-gradient. Such temporal integration may enable sorting the low signal from stochastic noise when tracking shallow gradients.
Item Open Access Punctuated evolution and transitional hybrid network in an ancestral cell cycle of fungi.(Elife, 2016-05-10) Medina, Edgar M; Turner, Jonathan J; Gordân, Raluca; Skotheim, Jan M; Buchler, Nicolas EAlthough cell cycle control is an ancient, conserved, and essential process, some core animal and fungal cell cycle regulators share no more sequence identity than non-homologous proteins. Here, we show that evolution along the fungal lineage was punctuated by the early acquisition and entrainment of the SBF transcription factor through horizontal gene transfer. Cell cycle evolution in the fungal ancestor then proceeded through a hybrid network containing both SBF and its ancestral animal counterpart E2F, which is still maintained in many basal fungi. We hypothesize that a virally-derived SBF may have initially hijacked cell cycle control by activating transcription via the cis-regulatory elements targeted by the ancestral cell cycle regulator E2F, much like extant viral oncogenes. Consistent with this hypothesis, we show that SBF can regulate promoters with E2F binding sites in budding yeast.