Studies on the Evolution of Silencing in Budding Yeasts Using Comparative Genomics

Studies on the Evolution of Silencing in Budding Yeasts Using Comparative Genomics
Author: Aisha Ellahi
Publisher:
Total Pages: 127
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN:

Regional promoter-independent gene silencing is critical in the establishment of cellular identity in Saccharomyces. Domains of transcriptionally silent regions in the genome are associated with certain heritable modifications made to chromatin, such as histone hypoacetylation and methylation. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, this type of gene repression occurs through the activity of the four Silent Information Regulator, or SIR genes (SIR1-4). From an evolutionary perspective, the SIR genes are unique: except for SIR2, all are specific to budding yeasts. Many other organisms, from Schizosaccharomyces pombe to human, utilize the RNA interference (RNAi) pathway, whereas most budding yeasts lack this pathway entirely. Interestingly, SIR1, SIR3, and SIR4 are also rapidly evolving among Saccharomyces yeasts, providing a model by which to examine the essential principles governing successful silencing across various species and the relationship between rapid sequence evolution and evolution of function. To examine the relationship between gene duplication, extreme sequence divergence, and functional evolution, I studied the SIR1 gene in S. cerevisiae and its most ancestral paralog, KOS3, in the pre-whole-genome-duplication budding yeast, Torulaspora delbrueckii. T. delbrueckii also possesses genes for RNAi, AGO1 and DCR1, allowing us the possibility of exploring how the evolutionary divergence of RNAi and SIR silencing occurred. In the process, I developed genetic tools for T. delbrueckii. To fully characterize SIR1 function in S. cerevisiae and SIR gene function in T. delbrueckii, I utilized chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by deep-sequencing (ChIP-Seq) of tagged Sir proteins in both species. This strategy allowed for the discovery of potential novel functions, as well, revealing functions that may have been gained or lost throughout SIR1's evolution. To identify loci that were directly repressed by Sir proteins, I also generated whole-transcriptome data by performing mRNA-Seq on wild-type and sir mutants in both species. Collectively, these data revealed that though SIR1 in both species is still involved in silencing, its role in that process has dramatically shifted. Previous data suggested that SIR1 is primarily associated with the establishment or nucleation phase of silencing and not involved in telomeric silencing. The Sir1 ChIP data in S. cerevisiae corroborated this assessment. In T. delbrueckii, however, KOS3 was essential for silencing, and was also found at telomeres. Thus, Sir1 in its early evolution had a more essential role in silencing; this role may have changed due to the duplication and diversification of the other Sir complex members. This diversification may be contributing to the continual change in interactions between Sir1 and other Sir complex members across budding yeasts, leading to different mutant phenotypes in each species. Assays of silencer function in T. delbrueckii answered critical questions about when in the phylogeny important shifts in transcription factor binding sites took place. My work showed that the arrival of the Rap1, ORC, and Abf1 binding sites in the silencers of budding yeasts took place prior to the whole-genome duplication event. Analysis of silencer structure also revealed the diversity of chromatin architecture in budding yeasts: S. cerevisiae silent mating type loci have two silencers on either side of each locus, whereas in T. delbrueckii, there appears to be a single silencer on one side of each mating type locus. Transcriptome analysis of RNAi mutants revealed that this pathway in T. delbrueckii does not function in heterochromatic gene silencing, suggesting that this pathway has already been repurposed for some other biological process. The examination of whole-transcriptome data in S. cerevisiae in conjunction with the enrichment patterns of the Sir proteins at telomeres allowed us to evaluate widely accepted models regarding the molecular architecture of heterochromatin and expression at S. cerevisiae telomeres. I established that repression of gene expression at native telomeres is not as widespread as previously thought, and that many genes in proximity to regions of Sir protein enrichment were, in fact, expressed just as equally in wild type as they were in sir mutant genetic backgrounds. However, twenty-one genes were convincingly repressed by Sir proteins, highlighting the complex and individual nature of native telomeres and subtelomeric genes. The sensitivity of RNA-Seq also uncovered a previously under-appreciated class of haploid-regulated genes: genes that were not fully repressed or de-repressed in the diploid a/[alpha]-cell type, but rather weakly repressed or de-repressed. Thus, my work has expanded the set of known a/[alpha]-regulated genes in S. cerevisiae. In conclusion, this dissertation has broadened our understanding of the functional constraints dictating silencing gene evolution across species that diverged prior to and after the whole-genome-duplication event. My data speaks to the actual chromatin architecture and expression state of native S. cerevisiae telomeres, leading to the refinement of existing models and an appreciation for how heterogeneous these regions of the genome can be.

Evolutionary Genetic Studies of Mating Type and Silencing in Saccharomyces

Evolutionary Genetic Studies of Mating Type and Silencing in Saccharomyces
Author: Oliver Zill
Publisher:
Total Pages: 274
Release: 2010
Genre:
ISBN:

This thesis describes studies exploring the evolution of the genetic circuits regulating yeast mating-type and silencing by Sir (Silent Information Regulator) proteins in the budding yeast Saccharomyces bayanus, a close relative of the laboratory workhorse S. cerevisiae (a.k.a., budding yeast, or brewer's yeast). The two central subjects of these studies, mating type and silencing, are textbook examples of "well understood" mechanisms of eukaryotic gene regulation: the former serves as a model for understanding the genetic control of cell-type differentiation, the latter serves as a model for understanding physically condensed, transcriptionally repressed portions of the genome, often referred to as "heterochromatin". The two subjects are intimately connected in the biology of the budding yeast life cycle, as explained below, and I argue that a deeper appreciation of this connection is necessary for further progress in the study of either subject. My thesis brings a critical evolutionary perspective to certain assumptions underlying current knowledge of mating-type regulation and silencing--in short, an appreciation of organismal biology that has been marginalized in the pursuit of understanding molecular mechanisms. The value of this perspective is in attempting to understand the purpose of a biological process--why is there such a thing as silencing, and why does it require the particular proteins and DNA elements that it does? To ask what silencing does for a yeast cell, we can start by asking how the silencing mechanism is constrained over evolutionary time. One of the surprising findings of my thesis is how unconstrained some elements of the silencing machinery are during evolution. At least three major findings arise from the comparative genetics studies described here: First, I describe the first new branch of the mating-type control circuit in almost 25 years. Although alpha-specific genes were previously thought to be "off" in MATa cells due to the absence of the alpha1 activator protein (i.e., by default), I show that these genes are, in fact, actively repressed by the Sum1 protein. This novel regulatory branch highlights the sophisticated control mechanisms necessary to coordinate the mating and mating-type switching processes. This finding has additional implications, including questioning the extent to which the "absence of activator" model is sufficient to explain the absence of a particular gene's expression; and that at least one subset of mating genes may be under environmental or metabolic regulation via the Sum1-associated NAD+-dependent histone deacetylase Hst1. Second, I show that at least two major genetic alterations to the Sir-based silencing machinery occurred in the recent ancestry of S. cerevisiae and its closest relative species. These changes reveal that our understanding of the silencing mechanism has been limited by the relative lack of comparative genetic sampling of the silencing process. That is, our understanding can improve via functional studies of silencing in close relatives of S. cerevisiae with variant silencing machinery, fueling new hypotheses about how silencing works. Although the identities of the major players (Sir1-4) largely remain the same, my discovery that certain silencing proteins are incompatible across closely related Saccharomyces species suggests evolutionary alterations in the genetic network of silencing--variation that could be tapped in future studies to understand better the way that silencing works. Of particular note are the rapid sequence evolution of SIR4, and the changes in copy number and sequence of SIR1, between S. bayanus and S. cerevisiae. SIR4 and SIR1 appear to rapidly evolve for interesting, though not completely overlapping, reasons. SIR4 appears to be under diversifying selection in modern yeast populations, and its coding sequence evolves rapidly across two rather distant clades spanning the Saccharomyces complex--the sensu stricto clade, and the Torulaspora clade. Third, I show that Sir4 and silencers are engaged in a remarkable pattern of co-evolution in Saccharomyces yeasts. I used a novel combination of classical genetic techniques in S. cerevisiae/S. bayanus hybrids to test cis versus trans contributions to a genetic incompatibility between S. cerevisiae SIR4 and the S. bayanus HMR locus. Comparative ChIP-Seq of Sir4 in these hybrids helped identify the molecular basis for this incompatibility. Critically, I show that the S. bayanus HMR locus, when transferred into S. cerevisiae, can be silenced only by the specific combination of S. bayanus Sir4 and Kos3 proteins, with potential contributions by S. bayanus ORC and the other Sir1 paralogs. A striking asymmetry in cross-species compatibility of S. bayanus versus S. cerevisiae SIR4 genes, and in each species' Sir4 ChIP-Seq profile, suggests that compensatory changes have occurred in SIR4 and in silencers along the S. cerevisiae lineage. Although the initial evolutionary pressure(s) driving these rapid changes remains uncertain, my results point to some pressure driving either the silencers' or Sir4's rapid sequence change, with the other factor subsequently changing to maintain compatibility within a species. From a practical standpoint, these results suggest that molecular studies of silencing using only S. cerevisiae suffer from a previously unrecognized bias. That S. bayanus has four Sir1-like proteins, each important for silencing, suggests additional dimensions (i.e., temporal and/or spatial components) to the interactions occurring at silencers between Sir1, Sir4, ORC, and Rap1. An interesting consequence of the comparative Sir4 ChIP-Seq experiments was the generation of a high-resolution picture of the architecture of silent chromatin in yeast. The unexpected non-uniform distributions of Sir4 protein across HML and HMR bring into question the standard "spreading" model for yeast silent chromatin formation, and will fuel future experiments to determine how Sir-based chromatin structures determine gene silencing and the epigenetic inheritance of gene expression states. I describe the novel ChIP-Seq picture of Sir protein association with silenced loci in Appendix A. Finally, in addition to these specific biological insights, my comparative genetic studies provide guidelines for using the genetic variation between S. bayanus and S. cerevisiae as a tool to learn more about conserved genetic circuits and gene regulation mechanisms in general. Two substantial advances in evolutionary genetic techniques are presented in Chapters 3 and 4, which involve the use of yeast hybrids. First, I show that the genetic facility of S. cerevisiae/S. bayanus hybrids can be used to tease apart interspecies genetic variation of functional consequence that resides in cis-regulatory DNA elements from that in trans-acting transcriptional regulatory proteins. Second, in the case of silencing, the very act of re-introducing genetic factors that have been independently evolving for millions of years leads to unexpected, emergent phenotypes in the hybrids that can be used to understand the silencing mechanism itself. Lessons from my work should inform principles of comparative genetics using organisms closely related to classical "model organism" species such as S. cerevisiae.

Ecological Genomics

Ecological Genomics
Author: Christian R. Landry
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 358
Release: 2013-11-25
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9400773471

Researchers in the field of ecological genomics aim to determine how a genome or a population of genomes interacts with its environment across ecological and evolutionary timescales. Ecological genomics is trans-disciplinary by nature. Ecologists have turned to genomics to be able to elucidate the mechanistic bases of the biodiversity their research tries to understand. Genomicists have turned to ecology in order to better explain the functional cellular and molecular variation they observed in their model organisms. We provide an advanced-level book that covers this recent research and proposes future development for this field. A synthesis of the field of ecological genomics emerges from this volume. Ecological Genomics covers a wide array of organisms (microbes, plants and animals) in order to be able to identify central concepts that motivate and derive from recent investigations in different branches of the tree of life. Ecological Genomics covers 3 fields of research that have most benefited from the recent technological and conceptual developments in the field of ecological genomics: the study of life-history evolution and its impact of genome architectures; the study of the genomic bases of phenotypic plasticity and the study of the genomic bases of adaptation and speciation.

The Pangenome

The Pangenome
Author: Hervé Tettelin
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 311
Release: 2020-04-30
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3030382818

This open access book offers the first comprehensive account of the pan-genome concept and its manifold implications. The realization that the genetic repertoire of a biological species always encompasses more than the genome of each individual is one of the earliest examples of big data in biology that opened biology to the unbounded. The study of genetic variation observed within a species challenges existing views and has profound consequences for our understanding of the fundamental mechanisms underpinning bacterial biology and evolution. The underlying rationale extends well beyond the initial prokaryotic focus to all kingdoms of life and evolves into similar concepts for metagenomes, phenomes and epigenomes. The book’s respective chapters address a range of topics, from the serendipitous emergence of the pan-genome concept and its impacts on the fields of microbiology, vaccinology and antimicrobial resistance, to the study of microbial communities, bioinformatic applications and mathematical models that tie in with complex systems and economic theory. Given its scope, the book will appeal to a broad readership interested in population dynamics, evolutionary biology and genomics.

Functional and Comparative Genomics of Saccharomyces and non-Saccharomyces Yeasts: Potential for Industrial and Food Biotechnology

Functional and Comparative Genomics of Saccharomyces and non-Saccharomyces Yeasts: Potential for Industrial and Food Biotechnology
Author: Isabel Sá-Correia
Publisher: Frontiers Media SA
Total Pages: 255
Release: 2020-02-25
Genre:
ISBN: 2889635228

Since 1996, when the first Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome sequence was released, a wealth of genomic data has been made available for numerous S. cerevisiae strains, its close relatives, and non-conventional yeast species isolates of diverse origins. Several annotated genomes of interspecific hybrids, both within the Saccharomyces clade and outside, are now also available. This genomic information, together with functional genomics and genome engineering tools, is providing a holistic assessment of the complex cellular responses to environmental challenges, elucidating the processes underlying evolution, speciation, hybridization, domestication, and uncovering crucial aspects of yeasts´ physiological genomics to guide their biotechnological exploitation. S. cerevisiae has been used for millennia in the production of food and beverages and research over the last century and a half has generated a great deal of knowledge of this species. Despite all this, S. cerevisiae is not the best for all uses and many non-conventional yeast species have highly desirable traits that S. cerevisiae does not have. These include tolerance to different stresses (e.g. acetic acid tolerance in Zygosaccharomyces bailii, osmotolerance in Z. rouxii, and thermotolerance in Kluyveromyces marxianus and Ogataea (Hansenula) polymorpha), the capacity of assimilation of diverse carbon sources (e.g. high native capacity to metabolyze xylose and potential for the valorization of agroforest residues by Scheffersomyces (Pichia) stipites), as well as, high protein secretion, fermentation efficiency and production of desirable flavors, capacity to favor respiration over fermentation, high lipid biosynthesis and accumulation, and efficient production of chemicals other than ethanol amongst many. Several non-Saccharomyces species have already been developed as eukaryotic hosts and cell factories. Others are highly relevant as food spoilers or for desirable flavor producers. Therefore, non-conventional yeasts are now attracting increasing attention with their diversity and complexity being tackled by basic research for biotechnological applications. The interest in the exploitation of non-conventional yeasts is very high and a number of tools, such as cloning vectors, promoters, terminators, and efficient genome editing tools, have been developed to facilitate their genetic engineering. Functional and Comparative Genomics of non-conventional yeasts is elucidating the evolution of genome functions and metabolic and ecological diversity, relating their physiology to genomic features and opening the door to the application of metabolic engineering and synthetic biology to yeasts of biotechnological potential. We are entering the era of the non-conventional yeasts, increasing the exploitation of yeast biodiversity and metabolic capabilities in science and industry. In this collection the industrial properties of S. cerevisiae, in particular uses, are explored along with its closely related species and interspecific hybrids. This is followed by comparisons between S. cerevisiae and non-conventional yeasts in specific applications and then the properties of various non-conventional yeasts and their hybrids.

Origin and Evolution of Telomeres

Origin and Evolution of Telomeres
Author: Jozef Nosek
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 194
Release: 2008-05-26
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9781587063091

Linear chromosomes represent an evolutionary innovation associated with the origin of eukaryotic cells. This book describes how linear chromosomes and primordial pathways for maintaining their terminal structures, telomeres, emerged in early eukaryotes. Telomeres, derived from the Greek meaning terminal part, were first described by Hermann Muller in 1938. Telomeres are specialized structures that comprise the ends of linear chromosomes in eukaryotes. Linearity is crucial for chromosome pairing during meiosis and sexual reproduction. Inspired by Dobzhansky's dictum that "nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution", this book brings together information about the origin and evolution of telomeres, their functions and the consequences of eukaryotic linearity which is an essential prerequisite of meiotic cell division and sexual reproduction. Selective pressure toward linearization must have been associated with the emergence of robust and redundant mechanisms for the maintenance of telomeres. These pathways comprise a molecular clock involved in cell senescence, carcinogenesis and immortalization.

Codon Evolution

Codon Evolution
Author: Gina M. Cannarozzi
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 297
Release: 2012-02-23
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 019960116X

The second part of the book focuses on codon usage bias.

Yarrowia lipolytica

Yarrowia lipolytica
Author: Gerold Barth
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 190
Release: 2013-07-20
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3642383203

Due to various special physiological features and a genome that greatly differs in structure, gene content and organization from other yeasts, Y. lipolytica is widely used as a model organism. With its characteristics, such as the ability to accumulate oil and the high capacity for secretion of proteases and lipases, the yeast is also of great interest for biotechnological applications. The main topics covered in this Microbiology Monograph are: comparative genomics; mitochondrial genomics and proteomics, including the analysis of the respiratory chain; transposable elements and their activities; non-coding RNA genes, which display a number of unusual and remarkable features compared to other hemiascomycetes; utilization of hydrophobic substrates, of n-alkane and its oxidized derivatives as sources of carbon and energy; ambient pH signalling; comparison of protein families in non-conventional yeasts and S. cerevisiae; and the sulphur metabolism of cheese-ripening yeast. .

Gene Prediction

Gene Prediction
Author: Martin Kollmar
Publisher: Humana Press
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2019-05-19
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9781493991723

This volume introduces software used for gene prediction with focus on eukaryotic genomes. The chapters in this book describe software and web server usage as applied in common use-cases, and explain ways to simplify re-annotation of long available genome assemblies. Written in the highly successful Methods in Molecular Biology series format, chapters include introductions to their respective topics, lists of the necessary computational requirements, step-by-step, readily reproducible computational protocols, and tips on troubleshooting and avoiding known pitfalls. Cutting-edge and thorough, Gene Prediction: Methods and Protocols is a valuable resource for researchers and research groups working on the assembly and annotation of single species or small groups of species. Chapter 3 is available open access under a CC BY 4.0 license via link.springer.com.