| Literature DB >> 28546384 |
Eva-Maria Holstein1, Greg Ngo1,2, Conor Lawless1, Peter Banks1, Matthew Greetham1,3, Darren Wilkinson4, David Lydall5.
Abstract
Functional telomeres are critically important to eukaryotic genetic stability. Scores of proteins and pathways are known to affect telomere function. Here, we report a series of related genome-wide genetic interaction screens performed on budding yeast cells with acute or chronic telomere defects. Genetic interactions were examined in cells defective in Cdc13 and Stn1, affecting two components of CST, a single stranded DNA (ssDNA) binding complex that binds telomeric DNA. For comparison, genetic interactions were also examined in cells with defects in Rfa3, affecting the major ssDNA binding protein, RPA, which has overlapping functions with CST at telomeres. In more complex experiments, genetic interactions were measured in cells lacking EXO1 or RAD9, affecting different aspects of the DNA damage response, and containing a cdc13-1 induced telomere defect. Comparing fitness profiles across these data sets helps build a picture of the specific responses to different types of dysfunctional telomeres. The experiments show that each context reveals different genetic interactions, consistent with the idea that each genetic defect causes distinct molecular defects. To help others engage with the large volumes of data, the data are made available via two interactive web-based tools: Profilyzer and DIXY. One particularly striking genetic interaction observed was that the chk1∆ mutation improved fitness of cdc13-1 exo1∆ cells more than other checkpoint mutations (ddc1∆, rad9∆, rad17∆, and rad24∆), whereas, in cdc13-1 cells, the effects of all checkpoint mutations were similar. We show that this can be explained by Chk1 stimulating resection-a new function for Chk1 in the eukaryotic DNA damage response network.Entities:
Keywords: DNA damage; telomere; yeast
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28546384 PMCID: PMC5499144 DOI: 10.1534/g3.117.042283
Source DB: PubMed Journal: G3 (Bethesda) ISSN: 2160-1836 Impact factor: 3.154
Figure 1Genome-wide analysis of genetic interactions affecting the function of proteins that bind to ssDNA. (A) Molecules that interact at normal telomeres (left) or cdc13-1 telomeres (right). Multi-component complexes are highlighted. Most proteins illustrated directly interact with telomeric DNA, and/or at DNA damage. The NMD complex affects telomere length, indirectly, at least in part by affecting the levels of Stn1 and Ten1. Black text refers to proteins removed by the 19 gene deletions highlighted in (B–D). Blue text labels gene products not shown in B–D. These are Mec3 and Tlc1, which were missing from the genome-wide knock out collection used, Est2 which behaved differently from its partners Est1 and Est3 in most screens, and Sgs1 which was comparatively unfit in most screens. Red text labels essential genes, which cannot be deleted. (B) Fitness plot showing genetic interactions between members of the yeast knockout collection and stn1-13. Each point summarizes the effect of yfg∆ mutations on STN1 lyp1∆ or stn1-13 strain fitness at 33°. The colored points label gene deletions affecting proteins highlighted in (A). Fitness is measured as Maximum Doubling Rate × Maximum Doubling Potential (MDR × MDP, units are doublings squared per day, d2/day), as previously described (Addinall ). The dashed gray line represents the line of equal fitness in both strain backgrounds, and solid gray is the predicted fitness assuming genetic independence. (C) Same as in (B) but in CDC13 ura3∆ or cdc13-1 backgrounds, and at 27°. (D) Same as in (B) but in RFA3 lyp1∆ and rfa3-313 contexts, and at 30°.
Strains used in this study
| Strain | Genetic Background | Genotype | Related Figures |
|---|---|---|---|
| DLY640 | W303 | ||
| DLY1195 | W303 | ||
| DLY1255 | W303 | Figure S2 in | |
| DLY1256 | W303 | Figure S2 in | |
| DLY1273 | W303 | ||
| DLY1296 | W303 | ||
| DLY1543 | W303 | Figure S3 in | |
| DLY1544 | W303 | Figure S3 in | |
| DLY1585 | W303 | Figure S1 in | |
| DLY2234 | W303 | S1 and S2 in | |
| DLY2787 | W303 | ||
| DLY2988 | W303 | ||
| DLY3001 | W303 | Figure S1 and Figure S2 in | |
| DLY4528 | W303 | Figure S1 in | |
| DLY4557 | W303 | ||
| DLY4625 | W303 | ||
| DLY4647 | W303 | ||
| DLY4921 | W303 | ||
| DLY4922 | W303 | ||
| DLY4931 | W303 | ||
| DLY5007 | W303 | ||
| DLY5097 | W303 | ||
| DLY5255 | W303 | ||
| DLY5260 | W303 | ||
| DLY5261 | W303 | ||
| DLY5266 | W303 | ||
| DLY5386 | S288C | ||
| DLY5688 | S288C | ||
| DLY6720 | S288C | ||
| DLY7106 | W303 | ||
| DLY7108 | W303 | ||
| DLY7110 | W303 | ||
| DLY7112 | W303 | ||
| DLY7143 | W303 | ||
| DLY7145 | W303 | ||
| DLY7146 | W303 | ||
| DLY7747 | W303 | ||
| DLY8460 | W303 | ||
| DLY8767 | S288C | ||
| DLY9181 | S288C | ||
| DLY9326 | S288C | ||
| DLY9866 | W303 | ||
| DLY11098 | W303 | Figure S1 in | |
| DLY11099 | W303 | Figure S1 in | |
| DLY11100 | W303 | Figure S1 in | |
| DLY11101 | W303 | Figure S1 in | |
| DLY11102 | W303 | Figure S1 in | |
| DLY11103 | W303 | Figure S1 in | |
| DLY11104 | W303 | Figure S1 in | |
| DLY11105 | W303 | Figure S1 in | |
| DLY11215 | W303 | ||
| DLY11216 | W303 | ||
| DLY11637 | W303 | Figure S2 in | |
| DLY11696 | W303 | Figure S2 in | |
| DLY11697 | W303 | Figure S2 in | |
| DLY11729 | W303 | Figure S2 in | |
| DLY11730 | W303 | Figure S2 in | |
| DLY11182 | W303 | Figure S3 in | |
| DLY11183 | W303 | Figure S3 in |
QFA screens
| Screen No. | Query Strain | Spotting | Media | Temperature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| QFA0141 | Dilute | SDM_rhk_CTGN | 27°, UD_X3 | |
| QFA0132 | Concentrated | SDM_rhlk_CTGNH | 30°, 33° | |
| QFA0140 | Dilute | SDM_rhlk_CTGH | 27°, UD_X3 | |
| QFA0142 | Dilute | SDM_rhlk_CTGNH | 27°, UD_X1 | |
| QFA0051 | Dilute | SDM_rhlk_CTGNH | 27°, 30° | |
| QFA0136 | Concentrated | SDM_rhlk_CTGNH | 33° | |
| QFA0131 | Concentrated | SDM_rhlk_CTGNH | 30° |
List of proteins affected by gene deletions highlighted in QFA screens
| Standard Name | Complex | Description from |
|---|---|---|
| Ddc1 | 9-1-1 sliding clamp | DNA damage checkpoint protein; part of a PCNA-like complex required for DDR, required for pachytene checkpoint to inhibit cell cycle in response to unrepaired recombination intermediates; potential Cdc28p substrate; forms nuclear foci upon DNA replication stress |
| Rad17 | 9-1-1 sliding clamp | Checkpoint protein; involved in the activation of the DNA damage and meiotic pachytene checkpoints; with Mec3p and Ddc1p, forms a clamp that is loaded onto partial duplex DNA; homolog of human and |
| Rad24 | 9-1-1 sliding clamp | Checkpoint protein; involved in the activation of the DNA damage and meiotic pachytene checkpoints; subunit of a clamp loader that loads Rad17p-Mec3p-Ddc1p onto DNA; homolog of human and |
| Mre11 | MRX complex | Nuclease subunit of the MRX complex with Rad50p and Xrs2p; complex functions in repair of DNA DSBs and in telomere stability; Mre11p associates with Ser/Thr-rich ORFs in premeiotic phase; nuclease activity required for MRX function; widely conserved; forms nuclear foci upon DNA replication stress |
| Rad50 | MRX complex | Subunit of MRX complex with Mre11p and Xrs2p; complex is involved in processing DNA DSBs in vegetative cells, initiation of meiotic DSBs, telomere maintenance, and nonhomologous end joining; forms nuclear foci upon DNA replication stress |
| Xrs2 | MRX complex | Protein required for DNA repair; component of the Mre11 complex, which is involved in DSBs, meiotic recombination, telomere maintenance, and checkpoint signaling |
| Nam7 | NMD | ATP-dependent RNA helicase of the SFI superfamily; involved in NMD; required for efficient translation termination at nonsense codons and targeting of NMD substrates to P-bodies; binds to the small ribosomal subunit via an interaction with Rps26; forms cytoplasmic foci upon DNA replication stress |
| Nmd2 | NMD | Protein involved in the NMD pathway; interacts with Nam7p and Upf3p; involved in telomere maintenance |
| Upf3 | NMD | Component of the NMD pathway; along with Nam7p and Nmd2p; involved in decay of mRNA containing nonsense codons; involved in telomere maintenance |
| Yku70 | Ku heterodimer | Subunit of the telomeric Ku complex (Yku70p-Yku80p); involved in telomere length maintenance, structure, and telomere position effect; required for localization of telomerase ribonucleoprotein to nucleus via interaction with the TLC1 guide RNA; relocates to sites of double-strand cleavage to promote nonhomologous end joining during DSB repair |
| Yku80 | Ku heterodimer | Subunit of the telomeric Ku complex (Yku70p-Yku80p); involved in telomere length maintenance, structure, and telomere position effect; required for localization of telomerase ribonucleoprotein via interaction with the TLC1 guide RNA; relocates to sites of double-strand cleavage to promote nonhomologous end joining during DSB repair |
| Est1 | Telomerase | TLC1 RNA-associated factor involved in telomere length regulation; recruitment subunit of telomerase; has G-quadruplex promoting activity required for telomere elongation; possible role in activating telomere-bound Est2p-TLC1-RNA; EST1 has a paralog, EBS1, that arose from the whole genome duplication |
| Est2 | Telomerase | Reverse transcriptase subunit of the telomerase holoenzyme; essential for telomerase core catalytic activity, involved in other aspects of telomerase assembly and function; mutations in human homolog are associated with aplastic anemia. |
| Est3 | Telomerase | Component of the telomerase holoenzyme; involved in telomere replication |
| Rif1 | Rap1 interacting factor | Protein that binds to the Rap1p C-terminus; acts synergistically with Rif2p to help control telomere length and establish telomeric silencing; involved in control of DNA replication; contributes to resection of DNA DSBs; deletion results in telomere elongation |
| Rif2 | Rap1 interacting factor | Protein that binds to the Rap1p C-terminus; acts synergistically with Rif1p to help control telomere length and establish telomeric silencing; deletion results in telomere elongation; RIF2 has a paralog, ORC4, that arose from the whole genome duplication |
| Rad9 | DNA damage-dependent checkpoint protein; required for cell-cycle arrest in G1/S, intra-S, and G2/M, plays a role in postreplication repair (PRR) pathway; transmits checkpoint signal by activating Rad53p and Chk1p; hyperphosphorylated by Mec1p and Tel1p; multiple cyclin dependent kinase consensus sites, and the C-terminal BRCT domain contribute to DNA damage checkpoint activation; Rad9p Chk1 Activating Domain (CAD) is phosphorylated at multiple sites by Cdc28p/Clb2p | |
| Chk1 | Serine/threonine kinase and DNA damage checkpoint effector; mediates cell cycle arrest via phosphorylation of Pds1p; phosphorylated by checkpoint signal transducer Mec1p; homolog of | |
| Tel1 | Protein kinase primarily involved in telomere length regulation; contributes to cell cycle checkpoint control in response to DNA damage; acts with Red1p and Mec1p to promote interhomolog recombination by phosphorylation of Hop1; functionally redundant with Mec1p; regulates P-body formation induced by replication stress; homolog of human ataxia-telangiectasia mutated (ATM) gene | |
| Exo1 | 5′–3′ exonuclease and flap-endonuclease; involved in recombination, DSB repair, MMS2 error-free branch of the PRR pathway and DNA mismatch repair; role in telomere maintenance; member of the Rad2p nuclease family, with conserved N and I nuclease domains; relative distribution to the nucleus increases upon DNA replication stress; EXO1 has a paralog, DIN7, that arose from the whole genome duplication |
Figure 2Effects of rad9∆ or exo1∆ on the fitness of cdc13-1 strains. Fitness profile showing the effects of ∼5000 yfg∆ library mutations on the fitness of ura3∆, cdc13-1, cdc13-1 rad9∆, and cdc13-1 exo1∆ strains. Each point represents the fitness of one gene deletion strain in each combination of genetic background and temperature. Fitness is measured as in Figure 1. Nineteen telomere-related genes from Figure 1A are highlighted with colored symbols.
Figure 6Chk1 stimulates resection, Rad53 phosphorylation and checkpoint activation in response to telomere defects. (A) Map of the right arm of Chromosome V. (B) Quantification of 3′ ssDNA accumulation at loci indicated following telomere uncapping. All strains contain cdc13-1 cdc15-2 bar1∆ mutations (Table 1). Cells were arrested in G1 with α-factor at 23°, then released at 36° (Lydall and Weinert 1995). ssDNA was measured using QAOS (Booth ). The data and error bars plotted are the mean and SEM from two independent experiments. (C) Yeast strains with the indicated genotypes (all in cdc13-1 cdc15-2 bar1∆ background) were subjected to western blot analysis with anti-Rad53 and anti-tubulin antibodies at the times indicated. (D) Cell cycle position of the indicated cdc13-1 cdc15-2 bar1∆ strains was assessed by counting DAPI-stained cells.
Figure 3The effects of a library of yfg∆ mutations on fitness of cells after exposure to chronic or acute telomere defects. (A) Fitness profile comparing the effects of ∼5000 yfg∆ library mutations on the fitness of strains indicated after chronic (27°) or acute (UD) exposure to telomere defects. In UD experiments, cells were exposed to short periods of incubation at 36° (see Materials and Methods). Data are plotted as in Figure 2. (B) Fitness plot comparing evidence for genetic interactions between rad9∆ and ∼5000 yfg∆ deletions in a cdc13-1 background after acute telomere uncapping. Data are plotted as in Figure 1.
Figure 4Effects of gene deletions affecting the NMD pathway across a range of telomere defective backgrounds. (A) Profilyzer fitness profiles comparing the effects of nam7∆, nmd2∆, and upf3∆ mutations on fitness across all the genome-wide screens presented in Figure 1, Figure 2, and Figure 3. (B) Saturated cultures of the yeast strains indicated (see Table 1) were fivefold serially diluted in water, spotted onto YEPD agar plates, and incubated at the indicated temperatures for 2 d before being photographed.
Figure 5Effects of gene deletions affecting the DNA damage checkpoint pathway across a range of telomere defective backgrounds. (A) Profilyzer fitness profiles comparing the effects of ddc1∆, rad24∆, rad17∆, rad9∆, and chk1∆ mutations on fitness across all the screens presented in Figure 1, Figure 2, and Figure 3. (B) List of gene deletions with most similar fitness profiles to rad17∆ out of ∼5000 examined, including rad9∆ (position 27) and chk1∆ (position 82). (C, D) Yeast cultures treated as in Figure 4B.
Figure 7Kinase control over resection. A model of Chk1 stimulating Sgs1/Dna2 dependent resection and Rad53 inhibiting Exo1 dependent resection near uncapped telomeres of cdc13-1 mutants.