| Literature DB >> 23586741 |
Jennifer Summers McKinney1, Sunaina Sethi, Jennifer DeMars Tripp, Thuy N Nguyen, Brian A Sanderson, James W Westmoreland, Michael A Resnick, L Kevin Lewis.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Efficient mechanisms for rejoining of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) are vital because misrepair of such lesions leads to mutation, aneuploidy and loss of cell viability. DSB repair is mediated by proteins acting in two major pathways, called homologous recombination and nonhomologous end-joining. Repair efficiency is also modulated by other processes such as sister chromatid cohesion, nucleosome remodeling and DNA damage checkpoints. The total number of genes influencing DSB repair efficiency is unknown.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23586741 PMCID: PMC3637596 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-14-251
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Survival of control strains and new haploid DSB repair mutants when EcoRI is expressed from a galactose-inducible promoter. (A) Colony forming ability and cell growth rate are reduced in recombination-deficient rad50, rad51 and rad52 mutants. (B) Example of pronging plate assay used to screen MATα library mutants for EcoRI sensitivity. Cells contained either vector (pRS316) or YCpGal::RIb. Cells grown in raffinose media were serially diluted 5-fold and pronged onto plates containing either raffinose or galactose.
Library mutants identified as EcoRI-sensitive in cellscellsor both and strains
| S | S | S | S | ||
| S | S | S | S | ||
| S | S | S | R | ||
| S | S | N/D | S | ||
| S | S | S | N/D | ||
| S | S | SS | SS | ||
| SS | S | S | SS | ||
| SS | S | S | N/D | ||
| N/D | S | S | R | ||
| SS | S | S | R | ||
| SS | S | S | S | ||
| N/D | S | S | SS | ||
| SS | SS | S | S | ||
| N/D | SS | N/D | S | ||
| N/D | S | N/D | SS | ||
| S | SS | S | SS | ||
| SS | SS | S | S | ||
| N/D | S | SS | SS | ||
| N/D | SS | N/D | SS | ||
| SS | SS | SS | S | ||
| SS | S | S | S | ||
| SS | S | S | S | ||
| SS | SS | S | R | ||
| SS | S | S | S | ||
| SS | SS | SS | S | ||
| S | S | S | SS | ||
| S | N/D | S | S | ||
| S | S | S | SS | ||
| SS | S | S | N/D | ||
| SS | SS | SS | S | ||
| SS | S | SS | S | ||
| SS | SS | SS | S | ||
| S | SS | SS | S | ||
| SS | N/D | S | N/D | ||
| S | S | SS | N/D | ||
| SS | S | N/D | SS | ||
| S | SS | S | S | ||
| S | SS | SS | S | ||
| S | S | S | S | ||
| SS | SS | S | S | ||
| SS | SS |
a Eight RAD52 group mutants are shown at the top of the table. Mutants were ranked as resistant (R), sensitive (S), or strongly sensitive (SS) (see Methods). N/D usually indicates that the library strain was unable to grow on galactose plates. Some genes could not be tested for other reasons, e.g., MATα cdc40 cells were Ura+.
b Gene names separated by a forward slash indicate deletions affecting two or more overlapping open reading frames. The coding region of the gene listed first was deleted in each strain.
c The MATα mre11 strain was reconstructed for this study because the library mutant did not exhibit phenotypes characteristic of mre11 mutants (MMS- and gamma-sensitivity). dRTT109 is usually referred to as REM50 in the literature. eyml009w-b overlaps the verified gene spt5 and another open reading frame called yml009c-a.
Figure 2Survival assays used for determination of sensitivities to chemical clastogens. (A) MMS, (B) bleomycin. Plates contained control recombination-defective RAD52 group mutants (top panels) or deletion library strains (bottom panels).
Survival of EcoR1mutants after exposure to MMS, bleomycin or gamma radiation
| RAD52 group: | |||||||||||||
| SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | R | SS | SS | SS | ||
| SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | R | SS | SS | SS | ||
| SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | ||
| SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | ||
| New EcoRIs mutants: | |||||||||||||
| R | R | SS | SS | R | R | R | S | R | S | R | S | ||
| S | S | SS | SS | S | S | R | R | R | R | R | R | ||
| R | R | R | R | R | S | R | S | S | SS | R | R | ||
| S | SS | S | SS | R | R | R | S | S | SS | R | R | ||
| R | S | R | R | R | S | R | R | R | R | R | R | ||
| S | SS | S | S | R | R | SS | SS | S | SS | R | R | ||
| S | SS | R | R | R | S | R | SS | R | S | R | R | ||
| R | R | R | R | R | R | R | SS | S | SS | S | SS | ||
| S | S | SS | SS | S | SS | R | R | R | R | R | R | ||
| R | R | S | S | S | S | R | R | S | SS | R | R | ||
| R | R | SS | SS | S | SS | R | S | R | SS | S | SS | ||
| R | S | R | R | R | R | R | R | R | SS | R | S | ||
| R | R | SS | SS | S | SS | R | S | R | S | R | S | ||
| R | R | S | SS | R | R | S | SS | S | SS | R | R | ||
| SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | SS | R | R | R | R | R | R | ||
| R | R | S | S | SS | SS | R | R | R | S | R | R | ||
| S | SS | R | S | R | R | S | SS | S | SS | R | R | ||
| R | S | R | SS | S | SS | R | S | SS | SS | SS | SS | ||
| SS | SS | R | S | R | R | R | R | S | SS | R | R | ||
| S | SS | R | S | R | S | R | R | R | R | R | R | ||
| S | SS | R | S | R | R | S | SS | R | S | R | R | ||
| R | SS | R | R | R | R | S | S | S | S | R | R | ||
| R | S | R | S | S | S | R | R | R | S | R | S | ||
| R | R | R | R | S | S | R | R | R | R | R | R | ||
| R | SS | R | S | R | R | S | S | R | S | SS | SS | ||
| S | S | R | SS | S | SS | R | R | R | R | R | S | ||
| R | R | R | R | R | R | S | S | SS | SS | S | SS | ||
| R | S | SS | SS | SS | SS | R | R | SS | SS | R | R | ||
| R | R | R | R | R | S | S | SS | R | R | R | R | ||
| R | R | R | S | R | R | S | SS | S | SS | R | R | ||
| R | R | R | S | S | SS | R | SS | SS | SS | R | R | ||
| R | R | R | S | R | R | R | R | R | R | R | R | ||
| S | S | R | S | R | S | SS | SS | R | S | R | S | ||
| S | SS | R | S | S | SS | S | SS | R | S | R | R | ||
| S | SS | R | R | R | R | S | SS | R | S | R | R | ||
| SS | SS | R | S | S | S | SS | SS | S | SS | R | R | ||
| S | SS | R | R | R | R | ||||||||
a Mutants were ranked as resistant (R), sensitive (S), or strongly sensitive (SS). Mutants classified as SS exhibited > 25-fold higher killing than wildtype cells using semi-quantitative dilution pronging assays. Γ, gamma radiation.
Figure 3Classification of 81 EcoRIhaploid library mutants based on sensitivities to MMS, bleomycin and ionizing radiation. RAD52 group mutants are shown in boldface.
Survival of haploid yeast cells after a single brief exposure to the antitumor drug bleomycin
| WT | R | 100 ± 10.7% | |
| SS | 0.8 ± 0.3% | 125× | |
| SS | 0.04 ± 0.01% | 2500× | |
| R | 96.6 ± 28.3% | 1.0× | |
| R | 62.8 ± 9.3% | 1.6× | |
| R | 13.2 ± 1.2% | 7.6× | |
| R | 8.4 ± 2.5% | 11.9× | |
| R | 1.0 ± 0.7 | 100× | |
| S | 12.3 ± 2.9% | 8.1× | |
| SS | 6.3 ± 1.1% | 15.9× | |
| S | 5.1 ± 2.0% | 19.6× | |
| SS | 2.9 ± 0.3% | 34.5× | |
| SS | 2.3 ± 1.0% | 43.5× |
Averages of four trials and standard deviations are shown.
Figure 4Many library mutants contain a deletion of an open reading frame (ORF) that also deletes part or all of an overlapping ORF. (A-D) Illustrations depicting overlapping genes found at four chromosomal loci. (E) ORFs whose coding regions were precisely deleted in the library strains and overlapping ORFs affected by the deletion. Genes listed as “verified” are known to produce a protein product (source: Saccharomyces Genome Database). All other ORFs are unverified.
Figure 5Analysis of overlapping and adjacent ORFs affecting EcoRI sensitivity. (A) Example survival assay performed to determine if inactivation of three verified genes (YKL075C, NPL3, and TOP3) that overlap ORFs required for EcoRI resistance also affect resistance to EcoRI. (B) Deletion of two of the seven overlapping, verified genes resulted in strong killing by EcoRI. SS, strongly sensitive; R, resistant. (C) Schematic representations of loci containing two genes required for EcoRI resistance that are adjacent to each other.
Cellular functions/processes affected by genes required for resistance to EcoRI
| Sister chromatid cohesion | |
| Histone modification/remodeling | |
| Nuclease processing of DNA | |
| Chromosome stability/segregation | |
| Transcription regulation | |
| RNA processing/modification | |
| Protein posttranslational modification | |
| | |
| Cell membrane/cell wall | |
| Mitochondrial proteins |
a Gene names separated by a forward slash indicate deletions within two overlapping open reading frames. Functions and processes are described for the verified gene only. Source: The Saccharomyces Genome Database.
b The RTT109 gene is frequently referred to as REM50 in the literature.
Physical interactions among proteins required for efficient repair of EcoRI-induced DSBs*
| Rad50 | Rad55 | ||
| Rad51 | | Rtt107, Srs2 | |
| Rad59, Rdh54, Mlh1, Rad23, | Rad57 | ||
| Rfa1, Saw1, Sgs1, Srs2 | | Srs2 | |
| Rad52 | Mre11 | ||
| Rfa3, Saw1, Slx5 | | Dnl4, Msh5, Sgs1, Srs2, Yku80 | |
| Rad54 | Xrs2 | ||
| Adk1 | Net1 | Cac2, Rad53, Sir2 | |
| Akr1 | Not5 | ||
| Arp5 | Npl3 | ||
| Bck1 | Rad5 | Pol30, Rad18, Rev1, Srs2 | |
| Bud32 | Rem50 | Asf1, Pol30 | |
| Bur2 | Rpb9 | ||
| Ccr4 | Rpl12b | ||
| Cgi121 | Rpl31a | ||
| Cnm67 | Mlp2 | Rpl39 | |
| Ctf4 | Rsm7 | ||
| Ctf8 | Rtf1 | ||
| Dcc1 | Rvs161 | ||
| Ddc1 | Mec3, Rad17, | Sae2 | Sir3, Srs2 |
| Gcn5 | Sfp1 | Asf1 | |
| | Spt5 | ||
| Gnd1 | Spt20 | ||
| Lip5 | Srv2 | ||
| Mms2 | Pol30 | Taf14 | |
| Mms4 | Top3 | Dna2, Sgs1 | |
| Mms22 | Ubp8 | ||
| Mrps35 | Ubr1 | ||
* Includes proteins predicted to interact physically plus proteins that are shared components of a multisubunit complex. Underlined names indicate proteins encoded by genes that are required for resistance to EcoRI overexpression. Other interacting proteins have previously been linked to DSB repair and/or damage-inducible checkpoints. Associations were taken from the Saccharomyces Genome Database.