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Rapid Identification of Chemical Genetic Interactions in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Authors:David Dilworth  Christopher J Nelson
Institution:1.Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology, University of Victoria
Abstract:Determining the mode of action of bioactive chemicals is of interest to a broad range of academic, pharmaceutical, and industrial scientists. Saccharomyces cerevisiae, or budding yeast, is a model eukaryote for which a complete collection of ~6,000 gene deletion mutants and hypomorphic essential gene mutants are commercially available. These collections of mutants can be used to systematically detect chemical-gene interactions, i.e. genes necessary to tolerate a chemical. This information, in turn, reports on the likely mode of action of the compound. Here we describe a protocol for the rapid identification of chemical-genetic interactions in budding yeast. We demonstrate the method using the chemotherapeutic agent 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), which has a well-defined mechanism of action. Our results show that the nuclear TRAMP RNA exosome and DNA repair enzymes are needed for proliferation in the presence of 5-FU, which is consistent with previous microarray based bar-coding chemical genetic approaches and the knowledge that 5-FU adversely affects both RNA and DNA metabolism. The required validation protocols of these high-throughput screens are also described.
Keywords:Microbiology  Issue 98  chemical biology  high-throughput screen  Saccharomyces cerevisiae  yeast knock-out collection  deletion mutant array  chemical genetic interaction  synthetic lethal  synthetic sick  chemogenomics
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