Back to Search Start Over

High-resolution chemical dissection of a model eukaryote reveals targets, pathways and gene functions.

Authors :
Hoepfner, Dominic
Helliwell, Stephen B.
Sadlish, Heather
Schuierer, Sven
Filipuzzi, Ireos
Brachat, Sophie
Bhullar, Bhupinder
Plikat, Uwe
Abraham, Yann
Altorfer, Marc
Aust, Thomas
Baeriswyl, Lukas
Cerino, Raffaele
Chang, Lena
Estoppey, David
Eichenberger, Juerg
Frederiksen, Mathias
Hartmann, Nicole
Hohendahl, Annika
Knapp, Britta
Source :
Microbiological Research. Feb2014, Vol. 169 Issue 2/3, p107-120. 14p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Abstract: Due to evolutionary conservation of biology, experimental knowledge captured from genetic studies in eukaryotic model organisms provides insight into human cellular pathways and ultimately physiology. Yeast chemogenomic profiling is a powerful approach for annotating cellular responses to small molecules. Using an optimized platform, we provide the relative sensitivities of the heterozygous and homozygous deletion collections for nearly 1800 biologically active compounds. The data quality enables unique insights into pathways that are sensitive and resistant to a given perturbation, as demonstrated with both known and novel compounds. We present examples of novel compounds that inhibit the therapeutically relevant fatty acid synthase and desaturase (Fas1p and Ole1p), and demonstrate how the individual profiles facilitate hypothesis-driven experiments to delineate compound mechanism of action. Importantly, the scale and diversity of tested compounds yields a dataset where the number of modulated pathways approaches saturation. This resource can be used to map novel biological connections, and also identify functions for unannotated genes. We validated hypotheses generated by global two-way hierarchical clustering of profiles for (i) novel compounds with a similar mechanism of action acting upon microtubules or vacuolar ATPases, and (ii) an un-annotated ORF, YIL060w, that plays a role in respiration in the mitochondria. Finally, we identify and characterize background mutations in the widely used yeast deletion collection which should improve the interpretation of past and future screens throughout the community. This comprehensive resource of cellular responses enables the expansion of our understanding of eukaryotic pathway biology. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09445013
Volume :
169
Issue :
2/3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Microbiological Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
93584662
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.micres.2013.11.004