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Westmoreland TJ, et al.  (2009) Comparative genome-wide screening identifies a conserved doxorubicin repair network that is diploid specific in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. PLoS ONE 4(6):e5830

Abstract: The chemotherapeutic doxorubicin (DOX) induces DNA double-strand break (DSB) damage. In order to identify conserved genes that mediate DOX resistance, we screened the Saccharomyces cerevisiae diploid deletion collection and identified 376 deletion strains in which exposure to DOX was lethal or severely reduced growth fitness. This diploid screen identified 5-fold more DOX resistance genes than a comparable screen using the isogenic haploid derivative. Since DSB damage is repaired primarily by homologous recombination in yeast, and haploid cells lack an available DNA homolog in G1 and early S phase, this suggests that our diploid screen may have detected the loss of repair functions in G1 or early S phase prior to complete DNA replication. To test this, we compared the relative DOX sensitivity of 30 diploid deletion mutants identified under our screening conditions to their isogenic haploid counterpart, most of which (n = 26) were not detected in the haploid screen. For six mutants (bem1Delta, ctf4Delta, ctk1Delta, hfi1Delta,nup133Delta, tho2Delta) DOX-induced lethality was absent or greatly reduced in the haploid as compared to the isogenic diploid derivative. Moreover, unlike WT, all six diploid mutants displayed severe G1/S phase cell cycle progression defects when exposed to DOX and some were significantly enhanced (ctk1Delta and hfi1Delta) or deficient (tho2Delta) for recombination. Using these and other "THO2-like" hypo-recombinogenic, diploid-specific DOX sensitive mutants (mft1Delta, thp1Delta, thp2Delta) we utilized known genetic/proteomic interactions to construct an interactive functional genomic network which predicted additional DOX resistance genes not detected in the primary screen. Most (76%) of the DOX resistance genes detected in this diploid yeast screen are evolutionarily conserved suggesting the human orthologs are candidates for mediating DOX resistance by impacting on checkpoint and recombination functions in G1 and/or early S phases.

Status: Published Type: Journal Article | Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't | Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. PubMed ID: 19503795

Topics addressed in this paper

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Topics Topics not linked to Genes Genes linked to topics (#1 - 10 )
AFG3 AKR1 ARP5 BEM1 CCR4 CTF4 CTK1 DBF2 DHH1 ERG3
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Topics Genes linked to topics (#11 - 20 )
HFI1 HOM6 HPR1 LGE1 LSM7 MAC1 MDM20 MFT1 MMS22 MMS4
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Topics Genes linked to topics (#21 - 30 )
MRPL37 MRPL6 NUP133 OCH1 PAT1 PLC1 POP2 RAD50 RAD51 RAD52
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Topics Genes linked to topics (#31 - 40 )
RAD54 RAD55 RAD57 RAD59 RPB9 SLX8 SOD1 THO2 THP1 THP2
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Topics Genes linked to topics (#41 - 47 )
TRP1 TUP1 VMA21 VMA7 VPS36 YAF9 YOR199W
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