html5-img
1 / 33

UV Mutagenesis in Yeast

UV Mutagenesis in Yeast. Geneticists need variation to study the function of gene products. We create variation in the laboratory by mutagenesis. Ease of Genetic Manipulation. proteins. 4. 3. 2. 6. 5. DNA. 1. Features of a good model organism. Cell biology.

dessa
Download Presentation

UV Mutagenesis in Yeast

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. UV Mutagenesis in Yeast Geneticists need variation to study the function of gene products. We create variation in the laboratory by mutagenesis

  2. Ease of Genetic Manipulation proteins 4 3 2 6 5 DNA 1 Features of a good model organism • Cell biology • Conserved cellularprocesses • Biochemistry

  3. Important lab properties • Genetics: introduce mutations (UV, chemical, Xray) and design screens to identify mutations in process you are interested in • Isolate the products of meiosis • Recover mutations: stable haploid and diploid lifecycles. • Easy molecular manipulations-clonability (few introns), high rate of homologous recombination

  4. Fig. 7.2 Mutations are classified by what they do to DNA

  5. Fig. 7.6

  6. Fig. 7.12b1

  7. Fig. 7.12b2

  8. By choosing the correct mutagens, we can control the type of mutations we make. Because most of the chemicals are nasty, you will be using UV light to generate mutations

  9. sugar sugar sugar Formation of Thymidine Dimer sugar

  10. Fig. 7.7

  11. Photoreactivation requires photolyase enzyme Not present in humans

  12. Mutagenesis of yeast Haploid Irradiate with UV. Calculate survival curve Select optimal dose for isolation of mutations. Select on appropriate selective media: Replica plating to identify nutrient deficiencies.

  13. Survival curve In yeast, 50-90% killing is used in mutagenesis experiments

  14. Mutation curve

  15. DNA damage is more lethal to haploids Haploids Diploid cells Multicellular diploids

  16. Identifying mutants in adenine biosynthesis

  17. What can you do with yeast if you are not a geneticist? • Take advantage of the genes identified in genetic screens • Cell biology

  18. PCR can generate fusions or point mutations

  19. Fusions to GFP allow live cell analysis of protein function Aequoria victoria Green Fluorescent Protein

  20. Visualization of chromosome and microtubule dynamics to elucidate mechanisms of nuclear movement and chromosome segregation • lacI-GFP binding to tandem repeat lacO sequences integrated at specific loci. • Dynamics of GFP-fusions to tubulin, spindle pole and mt-based motor proteins. • Specific genetic perturbations to establish cause and effect

  21. Yeast Mitotic Spindle Structure EM Tub-GFP Kubai, 1978 Tomographic reconstruction 16 kinetochore microtubules and 4 interpolar microtubulesemanate from each spindle pole: 40 mts/1.5 m spindle

  22. microtubule Architecture of the kinetochore Maiato et al. (2004) KINETOCHORE CENTROMERE MT PLUS ENDS FIBROUSCORONA OUTER PLATE Ndc80/Hec1 Nuf2 Spc24 Spc25 BUB1 BUBR1 BUB3 MPS1 MAD1 MAD2 Cdc20 CENP-E KinI,Kip3? CENTROMERIC HETEROCHROMATIN CENP-B MCAK INCENP Aurora B Survivin Borealin/Dasra B ICIS INNER PLATE INTERZONE CENP-A CENP-C CENP-G CENP-H CENP-I/hMis6 CeKNL-1 hMis12 3F3/2 antigens McEwen et al. (1998) tension receptors & checkpoint signalling chromatid pairing, structural support, & MT attachment error correction kinetochore assembly & size determination MT attachment, regulation of MT dynamics, & checkpoint signalling OUTER KINETOCHORE INNER KINETOCHORE

  23. Ndc80RFP Spc29RFP overlay Smc3GFP DIC Ndc80RFP overlay Smc3GFP DIC Kinetochores are clustered at the ends the cohesin cylinder

  24. Interstrand cohesin Inflection point Kinetochore sleeve Intrastrand cohesin C-loop Proposed Path of Centromere DNA in a Eukaryotic Kinetochore: C-loop

  25. How do we dissect the function of the kinetochore?

  26. Pericentric looping requires NDC10 and not MT binding

  27. Patterns observed at 37oC and 25oC in temperature sensitive mutants

  28. Disruption of Centromeric Attachment via Ndc10

  29. Effects of Centromeric Attachment: ndc10-1 at Restrictive Temperature Centromere Microtubule

  30. Disruption of Microtubule Attachment via Nuf2

  31. Effects of Microtubule Attachment: nuf2-60 at Restrictive Temperature Centromere Microtubule

  32. Effects of Microtubule Attachment on the Inner and Outer Kinetochore Restrictive Temperature Permissive Temperature

  33. Using genetics and cell biology we have dissected functional elements of the kinetochore Inner kinetochore complex CBF3 bends centromere DNA . Clustering of 16 kinetochores requires both inner (COMA, MIND) and outer kinetochore (Ndc80) complexes. Outer kinetochore complexes essential for plus end microtubule interactions. Anderson et al. MCB 2009

More Related