Inorganic Se forms such as selenate or selenite (the two more abundant forms in nature) can be toxic in Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells, which constitute an adequate model to study such toxicity at the molecular level and the functions participating in protection against Se compounds. Those Se forms enter the yeast cell through other oxyanion...
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June 1, 2017 (v1)PublicationUploaded on: March 27, 2023
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August 28, 2017 (v1)Publication
The division of prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells produces two cells that inherit a perfect copy of the genetic material originally derived from the mother cell. The initiation of canonical DNA replication must be coordinated to the cell cycle to ensure the accuracy of genome duplication. Controlled replication initiation depends on a complex...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
March 28, 2022 (v1)Publication
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Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
March 6, 2018 (v1)Publication
We investigated the formation of X-shaped molecules consisting of joint circular minichromosomes (joint molecules) in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by two-dimensional neutral/neutral gel electrophoresis of psoralen-cross-linked DNA. The appearance of joint molecules was found to be replication dependent. The joint molecules had physical properties...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
April 11, 2017 (v1)Publication
Although DNA repair is faster in the transcribed strand of active genes, little is known about the possible contribution of mRNP biogenesis and export in transcription-coupled repair (TCR). Interestingly, mutants of THO, a transcription complex involved in maintenance of genome integrity, mRNP biogenesis and export, were recently found to be...
Uploaded on: March 27, 2023 -
June 16, 2017 (v1)Publication
Ultraviolet light (UV) causes DNA damage that is removed by nucleotide excision repair (NER). UVinduced DNA lesions must be recognized and repaired in nucleosomal DNA, higher order structures of chromatin and within different nuclear subcompartments. Telomeric DNA is made of short tandem repeats located at the ends of chromosomes and their...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
July 4, 2017 (v1)Publication
THO/TREX is a conserved, eukaryotic protein complex operating at the interface between transcription and messenger ribonucleoprotein (mRNP) metabolism. THO mutations impair transcription and lead to increased transcription-associated recombination (TAR). These phenotypes are dependent on the nascent mRNA; however, the molecular mechanism by...
Uploaded on: December 2, 2022 -
March 3, 2015 (v1)Publication
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Uploaded on: March 27, 2023 -
September 25, 2024 (v1)Publication
The genome of living cells is constantly challenged by DNA lesions that interfere with cellular processes such as transcription and replication. A manifold of mechanisms act in concert to ensure adequate DNA repair, gene expression, and genome stability. Bulky DNA lesions, such as those induced by UV light or the DNA-damaging agent...
Uploaded on: September 26, 2024 -
October 1, 2015 (v1)Publication
DNA replication initiates at defined replication origins along eukaryotic chromosomes, ensuring complete genome duplication within a single S-phase. A key feature of replication origins is their ability to control the onset of DNA synthesis mediated by DNA polymerase-α and its intrinsic RNA primase activity. Here, we describe a novel...
Uploaded on: December 2, 2022 -
October 31, 2022 (v1)Publication
Totiviridae L-A virus is a widespread yeast dsRNA virus. The persistence of the L-A virus alone appears to be symptomless, but the concomitant presence of a satellite M virus provides a killer trait for the host cell. The presence of L-A dsRNA is common in laboratory, industrial, and wild yeasts, but little is known about the impact of the L-A...
Uploaded on: March 24, 2023 -
June 29, 2020 (v1)Publication
Background: Bacterial resistance to antibiotics is one of the biggest challenges facing medicine today. Anti-adhesive therapy, using inhibitors of bacterial adhesion to epithelial cells, one of the first stages of infection, is a promising approximation in this area. The size, shape, number of sugar and their placement are variables that...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
January 9, 2023 (v1)Publication
Understanding which intracellular signaling pathways are activated by manganese stress is crucial to decipher how metal overload compromise cellular integrity. Here, we unveil a role for oxidative and cell wall stress signaling in the response to manganese stress in yeast. We find that the oxidative stress transcription factor Yap1 protects...
Uploaded on: March 3, 2023 -
July 4, 2017 (v1)Publication
THO/TREX, a conserved eukaryotic protein complex, is a key player at the interface between transcription and mRNP metabolism. The lack of a functional THO complex impairs transcription, leads to transcriptiondependent hyperrecombination, causes mRNA export defects and fast mRNA decay, and retards replication fork progression in a...
Uploaded on: March 27, 2023 -
January 29, 2019 (v1)Publication
Regulation of intracellular ion homeostasis is essential for eukaryotic cell physiology. An example is provided by loss of ATP2C1 function, which leads to skin ulceration, improper keratinocyte adhesion, and cancer formation in Hailey-Hailey patients. The yeast ATP2C1 orthologue PMR1 codes for a Mn(2+)/Ca(2+) transporter that is crucial for...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
May 12, 2021 (v1)Publication
Manganese is an essential trace element, whose intracellular levels need to be carefully regulated. Mn2+ acts as a cofactor for many enzymes and excess of Mn2+ is toxic. Alterations in Mn2+ homeostasis affect metabolic functions and mutations in the human Mn2+/Ca2+ transporter ATP2C1 have been linked to Hailey-Hailey disease. By deletion of the...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
March 21, 2018 (v1)Publication
Genomic instability is related to a wide-range of human diseases. Here, we show that mitochondrial iron–sulfur cluster biosynthesis is important for the maintenance of nuclear genome stability in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Cells lacking the mitochondrial chaperone Zim17 (Tim15/Hep1), a component of the iron–sulfur biosynthesis machinery, have...
Uploaded on: March 27, 2023 -
August 30, 2022 (v1)Publication
The essential biometal manganese (Mn) serves as a cofactor for several enzymes that are crucial for the prevention of human diseases. Whether intracellular Mn levels may be sensed and modulate intracellular signaling events has so far remained largely unexplored. The highly conserved target of rapamycin complex 1 (TORC1, mTORC1 in mammals)...
Uploaded on: March 25, 2023 -
September 24, 2021 (v1)Publication
Golgi trafficking depends on the small GTPase Arf1 which, upon activation, drives the assembly of different coats onto budding vesicles. Two related types of guanine nucleotide exchange factors (GEFs) activate Arf1 at different Golgi sites. In yeast, Gea1 in the cis-Golgi and Gea2 in the medial-Golgi activate Arf1 to form COPIcoated vesicles...
Uploaded on: March 25, 2023 -
March 31, 2020 (v1)Publication
Replication of a damaged DNA template can threaten the integrity of the genome, requiring the use of various mechanisms to tolerate DNA lesions. The Smc5/6 complex, together with the Nse2/Mms21 SUMO ligase, plays essential roles in genome stability through undefined tasks at damaged replication forks. Various subunits within the Smc5/6 complex...
Uploaded on: December 5, 2022