Download Suppressors

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Oncogenomics wikipedia , lookup

Frameshift mutation wikipedia , lookup

X-inactivation wikipedia , lookup

Quantitative trait locus wikipedia , lookup

Epigenetics of neurodegenerative diseases wikipedia , lookup

Plasmid wikipedia , lookup

Population genetics wikipedia , lookup

Mutation wikipedia , lookup

Pathogenomics wikipedia , lookup

Ridge (biology) wikipedia , lookup

Minimal genome wikipedia , lookup

Public health genomics wikipedia , lookup

Biology and consumer behaviour wikipedia , lookup

NEDD9 wikipedia , lookup

Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis wikipedia , lookup

Epigenetics of diabetes Type 2 wikipedia , lookup

Genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup

Genomic imprinting wikipedia , lookup

Saethre–Chotzen syndrome wikipedia , lookup

Vectors in gene therapy wikipedia , lookup

Copy-number variation wikipedia , lookup

Epigenetics of human development wikipedia , lookup

Nutriepigenomics wikipedia , lookup

RNA-Seq wikipedia , lookup

Gene therapy wikipedia , lookup

Gene therapy of the human retina wikipedia , lookup

Gene wikipedia , lookup

Epistasis wikipedia , lookup

Helitron (biology) wikipedia , lookup

No-SCAR (Scarless Cas9 Assisted Recombineering) Genome Editing wikipedia , lookup

Therapeutic gene modulation wikipedia , lookup

Point mutation wikipedia , lookup

The Selfish Gene wikipedia , lookup

Genome evolution wikipedia , lookup

History of genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup

Gene desert wikipedia , lookup

Genome (book) wikipedia , lookup

Gene nomenclature wikipedia , lookup

Gene expression programming wikipedia , lookup

Gene expression profiling wikipedia , lookup

Site-specific recombinase technology wikipedia , lookup

Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup

Designer baby wikipedia , lookup

Microevolution wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
17 Oct, 2011
Suppressors
The motivation for most suppressors screens is to find more genes that affect the
same biological process as the original gene.
Two types of suppression:
I. Suppression – a mutation in one gene alleviates the defect of a mutation in another
gene—“low-copy” suppressor.
II. Suppression – overexpression of a wild-type copy of a gene alleviates the defect of
a mutation in another gene—“high-copy suppressor”. In this case the wild-type
allele of a gene is acting as an extragenic suppressor.
Low-copy supressors involved getting a second mutation in the genome.
Once the suppressor is found, the first question:
If this suppressor defines a different gene?
If this mutation in the same gene it is an intragenic suppressor, which can be true
revertant or pseudo-revertant, which you are not interested in.
To figure this out, you need to perform mapping. You should remember how to
perform mapping from the last review.
High-copy suppressors screen involves the use of a wild-type cloned gene.
Over-expression of WT copy one gene ameliorates the effect of a mutation in
another gene.
High-copy suppression involves using a high-copy plasmid or constitutive or
inducible promoters are used to overexpress a suppressor gene.
Suppose you have a mutant and you want to identify more genes that a affect the
same biological process:
Make a genomic library from WT strain
Use 2μ plasmid with a selection marker
Transform your mutants
Select ones that have WT phenotype
What kind of suppressor genes you expect to see:
1) WT allele of the original mutation.
2) Genes, product of which directly interact with your mutant gene and restore
its WT biochemical activity.
3) Genes that are functionally-related to your gene, but not interact with it.
Over-expression of this gene provides enough functional product to
overcome the loss of the first gene. These are bypass suppressors.
How one could distinguish a suppressor from a bypass suppressor?
1
A bypass suppressor allows suppression of null allele—it does not need a residual
activity of the first mutant gene to restore WT phenotype.
Example:
TUB1and TUB3 –tubulin genes, they are paralogs
TUB1 is essential—yeast cannot grow and divide
TUB3 is not essential
You can build 2 different models and test them:
1) TUB3 isoform is not involved in growth and cell division, although homologous,
TUB3 might be functionally distinct from TUB1
OR
2) TUB1 and TUB3 have similar functions, but their level of expression is different.
Mutant tub3Δ is fine, because TUB1 provides enough product to substitute for its
loss.
To test these hypotheses:
Varying the dose of the genes can test these two hypotheses. Under the first
hypothesis, changing the dose of the gene will have no effect. Under the second
hypothesis increasing the dose of TUB3 should suppress a tub1 mutant.
Perform high copy suppression experiment:
Have a strain tub1 (ura3 Δ, trp1 Δ) carrying TUB1 on URA3 plasmid.
You want to get rid of this plasmid later (since TUB1 is essential).
What promoter and plasmid would you use—native if and low-copy CEN plasmid?
Transform it with TUB3 on a 2μ plasmid with TRP1 as a selection marker.
Plate on +5FOA, -trp
TUB1 CEN plasmid should be lost.
2