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BUDDING TECHNOLOGIES AND BUDDING YEAST 2012 HHMI Summer Workshop for High School Science Teachers

Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

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Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast. 2012 HHMI Summer Workshop for High School Science Teachers. The Genomics of S.cerevisiae. GOALS. Introduction to the Genomics of Yeast Sequencing Technologies and how they are evolving Introduction to Systems Biology and modern Yeast Genetics. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

BUDDING TECHNOLOGIES AND BUDDING YEAST

2012 HHMI Summer Workshop for High School Science Teachers

Page 2: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

The Genomics of S.cerevisiae

Page 3: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

GOALSIntroduction to the

Genomics of Yeast

Sequencing Technologies and how they are evolving

Introduction to Systems Biology and modern Yeast Genetics

Page 4: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Genetics and Genomics GENETICS is the science of genes,

heredity and variation. Genetic studies typically focus on a single

gene. Experiments typically involve mutation of

the model organism, then looking to figure out what went wrong.

GENOMICS is a discipline of systems biology that focuses on the genome. Genomic studies typically study all genes at

once

Page 5: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Basic Yeast Statistics 16 chromosomes

Page 6: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Genomic Organization & Nomenclature

16 Chromosomes. Range from

230kbp – 1.5Mbp

Page 7: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Basic Yeast Statistics 16 chromosomes 13.1 Mbp of sequence

Yeast:13.1 Mbp

Zebrafish:1.2 Gbp

Drosophila:122 Mbp

Human:3.3 Gbp

E.coli:4.6 Mbp

Page 8: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Basic Yeast Statistics 16 chromosomes 13.1 Mbp of sequence 6,183 open reading frames 73% of the genome codes for genes

Yeast:6,183

Zebrafish:15,800

Drosophila:17,000

Human:23,000

E.coli:4,377

Page 9: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Basic Yeast Statistics 16 chromosomes 13.1 Mbp of sequence 6,183 open reading frames 73% of the genome codes for genes Genes are named by position.

Y A L 014 CChromosome I 14th gene

from the centromere

Left arm Crick Strand

Page 10: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Where to learn more: Saccharomyces Genome Database

Page 11: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Where to learn more: Browser

Saccharomyces Genome Database

Page 12: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Yeast as a Model SystemYeast share most basic systems with human.- Polymerases- Nucleosomes- Translation- Splicing- Stress response- DNA damage response- Cell Cycle- Mitotic mechanisms- Meiosis

Page 13: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

More about Yeast About75% of yeast

genes have something known about them.

Page 14: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

More about Yeast About75% of

yeast genes have known functions.

Many genes serve to regulate other genes.

Page 15: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

More about Yeast About75% of

yeast genes have known functions.

Many genes serve to regulate other genes.

About 1/3 of proteins are in the nucleus.

Page 16: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

GOALSIntroduction to the

Genomics of Yeast

Sequencing Technologies and how they are evolving

Introduction to Systems Biology and modern Yeast Genetics

Page 17: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Sequencing the First Eukaryote

• 600 Scientists

• >100 labs• World wide

effort

Page 18: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Sanger Sequencing

Page 19: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Sanger Sequencing

Page 20: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

So… How do you sequence a Genome?

Walking

Page 21: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

So… How do you sequence a Genome?

Walking

Page 22: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

So… How do you sequence a Genome?

Walking Types of vectors

Type Host Amount of DNA

plasmid E.Coli 1-20 kbcosmid E.Coli / phage 37-52 kbfosmid E.Coli – F’

element40 kb 1/cell

BAC E.coli 150-350 kbYAC Yeast 100 – 3,000 kb

Page 23: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

So… How do you sequence a Genome?

Walking Shotgunning

~1-2kb

Randomly fragment

Completely sequence

Reassemble

Page 24: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Walking Shotgunning Mixed Approach

Prescaffolding

So… How do you sequence a Genome?

markers

Large vectors

Page 25: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

So… How do you sequence a Genome?

Walking Shotgunning Mixed Approach

Prescaffolding Shotgunning the fragments

markers

Large vectors

Smallplasmids

Page 26: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Yeast to Human….

Page 27: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

A new revolution 454 Solexa ABI

Page 28: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

How NGS works Fundamentally

different from Sanger

Detect each base individually, then extend

Watch as polymerase moves along the chain

Each molecule is read multiple times

Page 29: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

How NGS works Illumina

Sequencing uses “Sequencing by Synthesis

Adaptors added to DNA to make them bind the flowcell.

In situ, the DNA is amplified into a cluster

Page 30: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

How NGS works Primer then binds

to the sequence. Bases are flowed

over the cluster and nucleotides are read.

Page 31: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

How NGS works Primer then binds

to the sequence. Bases are flowed

over the cluster and nucleotides are read.

Billions of reads are happening at once.

Page 32: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

A new revolution Sequencing costs

are plummeting.

Page 33: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

A new revolution Sequencing costs

are plummeting. Cut in half every

year.

Page 34: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

A new revolution Sequencing costs

are plummeting. Cut in half every

year. Yields are sky

rocketing.

Page 35: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Applications

gDNA

mRNA

miRNA

IP

Re-SequencingDe Novo SequencingSNP Discovery

Transcript DiscoveryExpression AnalysismiRNA AnalysisAllelic ExpressionChIP-Seq

Nuclear run-on

… and more Copy Number Variation

Page 36: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Applications: GeneticsMutation in alk in 224A/+

R>H D>N homozygous

Page 37: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

GOALSIntroduction to the

Genomics of Yeast

Sequencing Technologies and how they are evolving

Introduction to Systems Biology and modern Yeast Genetics

Page 38: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Systems Biology Most molecular biology

has been carried out with a reductionist point of view Look at one gene or one

protein or a class of genes Systems Biology attempts

to look at organisms holistically “OMICS” (genomics,

proteomics, metabolomics, transcriptomics, etc.)

Page 39: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Systems Biology: Beginnings

First whole genome experiments were done with microarrays. Surface of the microarray

is spotted with DNA reflecting every gene in the genome

Total RNA is hybridized to the surface

Amount of material can be measured by intensity

Page 40: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Forward Genetics v Reverse Genetics

Forward genetics is the classical method for doing screens. 1) Find a phenotype. 2) Find out why it happens.

Reverse genetics mutates a gene, then sees what it does. This defined genetic

alteration makes it amenable to systems biology approaches.

Page 41: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Functional Screen: Two-Hybrid

Screen genome wide for protein interaction partners.

A “prey” library requires every protein to be fused to a transcription activation domain.

Screen with a bait protein that binds to the DNA.

Page 42: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Functional Screen: Two-Hybrid

Screen genome wide for protein interaction partners.

A “prey” library requires every protein to be fused to a transcription activation domain.

Screen with a bait protein that binds to the DNA.

Create large networks.

Page 43: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

The Modern Yeast Toolkit Two-Hybrid Knockout library GFP Fusion library Overexpression library

High Copy Low Copy

GST fusion library

Page 44: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Screening GFP Libraries

Control -factor HU

Protein: RNR4

GFP Library

STRESSCntl-factor HU MMS

FIX and STAIN

IMAGEQuantify changes in intensity

and location

Data from Samson Lab

Page 45: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Knockout Library and “BARseq”

Knock out strains have unique molecular barcodes that act as finger prints.

By pooling all the strains together, frequency of each strain can be determined by the frequency of the barcode in NGS experiments

Page 46: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

Knockout Library and “BARseq”

Experiments can be done by looking at the variations in frequency of the pool after changing the environment of the library.

ALL STRAINS

RICH MEDIAMINIMALMINIMAL + AAs

SEQUENCE AND LOOK FORCHANGES IN FREQUENCY

Page 47: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

The Future – Synthetic Biology Key limitations of

current toolset Have to create each

strain separately. Finite number of

mutations being created.

Page 48: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

The Future – Synthetic Biology Assembly of

chromosomes in vitro. Can add any

mutation anywhere by replacing a segment and reintroducing.

Can create designer chromosomes with complex and unusual traits

Do not require “carrier markers”

Craig Venter, 2010

Page 49: Budding Technologies and Budding Yeast

The EndIntroduction to the

Genomics of Yeast

Sequencing Technologies and how they are evolving

Introduction to Systems Biology and modern Yeast Genetics