{"title":"Screening Reluctant Genes on the Double","authors":"","doi":"10.1126/scisignal.1132001tw461","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Genome sequencing projects have revealed thousands of genes of unknown functions. For the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, large-scale gene deletion analysis has shown that >80% of the ~6200 predicted or known yeast genes are not required for viability. Thus, many genes and pathways of eukaryotic cells may be functionally redundant, or may not show easily recognizable phenotypes if perturbed. To address this problem, Tong et al. developed an automated method for systematic construction of double mutants called synthetic genetic array (SGA) analysis. A yeast strain that carries a mutation in the \"query\" gene is linked to a selectable marker and crossed to members of a collection of haploid deletion strains in which almost every nonessential gene in the yeast genome is represented. If a double mutant cannot be produced or grows much more slowly than normal, it is an indication that there may be a functional interaction between the two genes. Putative interactions that are identified through this technology can then be readily confirmed by tetrad analysis. Eight query genes involved in cytoskeletal organization, DNA repair, or unknown functions were analyzed, resulting in the construction of a network identifying 291 putative genetic interactions involving 204 genes. A. H. Y. Tong, M. Evangelista, A. B. Parsons, H. Xu, G. D. Bader, N. Pagé, M. Robinson, S. Raghibizadeh, C. W. V. Hogue, H. Bussey, B. Andrews, M. Tyers, C. Boone, Systematic genetic analysis with ordered arrays of yeast deletion mutants. Science 294, 2364-2368 (2001). [Abstract] [Full Text]","PeriodicalId":21619,"journal":{"name":"Science's STKE","volume":"4 1","pages":"tw461 - tw461"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2001-12-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Science's STKE","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1126/scisignal.1132001tw461","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Genome sequencing projects have revealed thousands of genes of unknown functions. For the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, large-scale gene deletion analysis has shown that >80% of the ~6200 predicted or known yeast genes are not required for viability. Thus, many genes and pathways of eukaryotic cells may be functionally redundant, or may not show easily recognizable phenotypes if perturbed. To address this problem, Tong et al. developed an automated method for systematic construction of double mutants called synthetic genetic array (SGA) analysis. A yeast strain that carries a mutation in the "query" gene is linked to a selectable marker and crossed to members of a collection of haploid deletion strains in which almost every nonessential gene in the yeast genome is represented. If a double mutant cannot be produced or grows much more slowly than normal, it is an indication that there may be a functional interaction between the two genes. Putative interactions that are identified through this technology can then be readily confirmed by tetrad analysis. Eight query genes involved in cytoskeletal organization, DNA repair, or unknown functions were analyzed, resulting in the construction of a network identifying 291 putative genetic interactions involving 204 genes. A. H. Y. Tong, M. Evangelista, A. B. Parsons, H. Xu, G. D. Bader, N. Pagé, M. Robinson, S. Raghibizadeh, C. W. V. Hogue, H. Bussey, B. Andrews, M. Tyers, C. Boone, Systematic genetic analysis with ordered arrays of yeast deletion mutants. Science 294, 2364-2368 (2001). [Abstract] [Full Text]
基因组测序项目已经揭示了数千个功能未知的基因。对于出芽酵母Saccharomyces cerevisiae,大规模基因缺失分析表明,在约6200个预测或已知的酵母基因中,>80%是不需要生存的。因此,真核细胞的许多基因和途径可能在功能上是冗余的,或者如果受到干扰,可能不会显示容易识别的表型。为了解决这个问题,Tong等人开发了一种自动化的双突变体系统构建方法,称为合成基因阵列(SGA)分析。携带“查询”基因突变的酵母菌株与一个可选择的标记相连接,并与一组单倍体缺失菌株的成员杂交,其中几乎代表了酵母菌基因组中的每一个非必需基因。如果不能产生双突变体或比正常突变体生长得慢得多,则表明两个基因之间可能存在功能相互作用。通过这种技术确定的假定相互作用可以很容易地通过四分体分析加以证实。研究人员分析了涉及细胞骨架组织、DNA修复或未知功能的8个查询基因,从而构建了一个网络,确定了涉及204个基因的291个假定的遗传相互作用。A. H. Y. Tong, M. Evangelista, A. B. Parsons, H. Xu, G. D. Bader, N. pageer, M. Robinson, S. Raghibizadeh, C. W. V. Hogue, H. Bussey, B. Andrews, M. Tyers, C. Boone,酵母缺失突变体有序阵列的系统遗传分析。科学29,2364-2368(2001)。【摘要】【全文】