Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Bik Kwoon Tye is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Bik Kwoon Tye.


Cell | 1983

Organization of DNA sequences and replication origins at yeast telomeres

Clarence S.M. Chan; Bik Kwoon Tye

We have shown that the DNA sequences adjacent to the telomeres of Saccharomyces cerevisiae chromosomes are highly conserved and contain a high density of replication origins. The salient features of these telomeres can be summarized as follows. There are three moderately repetitive elements present at the telomeres: the 131 sequence (1 to 1.5 kb), the highly conserved Y sequence (5.2 kb), and the less conserved X sequence (0.3 to 3.75 kb). There is a high density of replication origins spaced about 6.7 kb apart at the telomeres. These replication origins are part of the X or the Y sequences. Some of the 131-Y repetitive units are tandemly arranged. The terminal sequence T (about 0.33 to 0.6 kb) is different from the 131, X, or Y sequences and is heterogeneous in length. The order of these sequences from the telomeric end towards the centromere is T-(Y-131)n-X-, where n ranges from 1 to no more than 4. Although these telomeric sequences are conserved among S. cerevisiae strains, they show striking divergence in certain closely related yeast species.


Nature Genetics | 2007

A viable allele of Mcm4 causes chromosome instability and mammary adenocarcinomas in mice

Naoko Shima; Ana Alcaraz; Ivan Liachko; Tavanna R. Buske; Catherine A. Andrews; Robert J. Munroe; Suzanne A. Hartford; Bik Kwoon Tye; John C. Schimenti

Mcm4 (minichromosome maintenance–deficient 4 homolog) encodes a subunit of the MCM2-7 complex (also known as MCM2–MCM7), the replication licensing factor and presumptive replicative helicase. Here, we report that the mouse chromosome instability mutation Chaos3 (chromosome aberrations occurring spontaneously 3), isolated in a forward genetic screen, is a viable allele of Mcm4. Mcm4Chaos3 encodes a change in an evolutionarily invariant amino acid (F345I), producing an apparently destabilized MCM4. Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains that we engineered to contain a corresponding allele (resulting in an F391I change) showed a classical minichromosome loss phenotype. Whereas homozygosity for a disrupted Mcm4 allele (Mcm4−) caused preimplantation lethality, McmChaos3/− embryos died late in gestation, indicating that Mcm4Chaos3 is hypomorphic. Mutant embryonic fibroblasts were highly susceptible to chromosome breaks induced by the DNA replication inhibitor aphidicolin. Most notably, >80% of Mcm4Chaos3/Chaos3 females succumbed to mammary adenocarcinomas with a mean latency of 12 months. These findings suggest that hypomorphic alleles of the genes encoding the subunits of the MCM2-7 complex may increase breast cancer risk.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1975

Mutagenesis by insertion of a drug resistance element carrying an inverted repetition

Nancy Kleckner; Russell K. Chan; Bik Kwoon Tye; David Botstein

A novel genetic element, which carries genes conferring tetracycline resistance (flanked by a 1400 base-pair inverted repetition), is capable of translocation as a unit from one DNA molecule to another. The tet R element, which is found in nature on a variety of R-factors, was acquired by bacteriophage P22 (producing P22Tc-10 and P22Tc-106) and has now been observed to insert into a large number of different sites on the Salmonella chromosome. Insertion of the tet R element is mutagenic when it occurs within a structural gene, and polar when it occurs within an operon. Insertion of the element is usually precise, occurring without loss of information on the recipient DNA molecule. Excision, on the other hand, is usually not precise, although excisions precise enough to restore a gene function can always be detected at low frequencies. Both insertion and excision processes are independent of the recA function.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1988

Saccharomyces cerevisiae protein involved in plasmid maintenance is necessary for mating of MATα cells

Steven Passmore; Gregory T. Maine; Randolph C. Elble; Chantal Christ; Bik Kwoon Tye

We previously reported the isolation of yeast mutants that seem to affect the function of certain autonomously replicating sequences (ARSs). These mutants are known as mcm for their defect in the maintenance of minichromosomes. We have now characterized in more detail one ARS-specific mutation, mcm1-1. This Mcm1 mutant has a second phenotype; MAT alpha mcm1-1 strains are sterile. MCM1 is non-allelic to other known alpha-specific sterile mutations and, unlike most genes required for mating, it is essential for growth. The alpha-specific sterile phenotype of the mcm1-1 mutant is manifested by its failure to produce a normal amount of the mating pheromone, alpha-factor. In addition, transcripts of the MF alpha 1 and STE3 genes, which encode the alpha-factor precursor and the alpha-factor receptor, respectively, are greatly reduced in this mutant. These and other properties of the mcm1-1 mutant suggest that the MCM1 protein may act as a transcriptional activator of alpha-specific genes. We have cloned, mapped and sequenced the wild-type and mutant alleles of MCM1, which is located on the right arm of chromosome XIII near LYS7. The MCM1 gene product is a protein of 286 amino acid residues and contains an unusual region in which 19 out of 20 residues are either aspartic or glutamic acid, followed by a series of glutamine tracts. MCM1 has striking homology to ARG80, a regulatory gene of the arginine metabolic pathway located about 700 base-pairs upstream from MCM1. A substitution of leucine for proline at amino acid position 97, immediately preceding the polyanionic region, was shown to be responsible for both the alpha-specific sterile and minichromosome-maintenance defective phenotypes of the mcm1-1 mutant.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1996

Physical interactions among Mcm proteins and effects of Mcm dosage on DNA replication in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Ming Lei; Yasuo Kawasaki; Bik Kwoon Tye

Mcm2, Mcm3, and Mcm5/Cdc46 are conserved proteins essential for the initiation of DNA synthesis at replication origins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The accumulation of these proteins in the nucleus before the onset of DNA synthesis suggests that they play a role in restricting DNA synthesis to once per cell cycle. In this work, we show that Mcm2, Mcm3, and Mcm5 self-interact and interact with one another to form complexes. Mcm2 and Mcm3 are abundant proteins, present in approximately 4 X 10(4) and 2 X 10(5) copies per cell, respectively. Reducing the dosage of Mcm2 by half results in diminished usage of specific replication origins. These results together suggest that a significant molar excess of Mcm proteins relative to replication origins is required for the proper initiation of all replication origins.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1974

Non-random circular permutation of phage P22 DNA

Bik Kwoon Tye; Joel A. Huberman; David Botstein

Abstract Phage P22 is known to have a linear duplex chromosome that is circularly permuted and terminally repeated. We have found, by constructing a partial denaturation map of mature P22 DNA, that circular permutation in P22 DNA is restricted: all of the ends of the mature DNA fall within 20% of each other on the physical map. The limited distribution of ends can be explained by the “headful” packaging model of Streisinger et al . (1967), with the additional specifications that: 1. (a) the intracellular precursor DNA is no longer than ten times the length of mature phage DNA; 2. (b) encapsulation of DNA starts at a unique site; 3. (c) encapsulation proceeds sequentially therefrom. This model is supported by the denaturation maps of two deletion phage DNAs. We found, as expected from our model, that the extent of permutation is a direct function of the length of terminal repetition. An independent demonstration of this relation between permutation and terminal repetition was done by denaturation-self-reannealing experiments using wild type and deletion phage DNAs. In the case of phage with large terminal repetitions (16%), we can discern discrete classes of molecules (using denaturation mapping), which we interpret as the first, second, etc. headful cut from the intracellular DNA concatemer.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1997

A Lesion in the DNA Replication Initiation Factor Mcm10 Induces Pausing of Elongation Forks through Chromosomal Replication Origins in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

A M Merchant; Y Kawasaki; Yanru Chen; Ming Lei; Bik Kwoon Tye

We describe a new minichromosome maintenance factor, Mcm10, and show that this essential protein is involved in the initiation of DNA replication in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The mcm10 mutant has an autonomously replicating sequence-specific minichromosome maintenance defect and arrests at the nonpermissive temperature with dumbbell morphology and 2C DNA content. Mcm10 is a nuclear protein that physically interacts with several members of the MCM2-7 family of DNA replication initiation factors. Cloning and sequencing of the MCM10 gene show that it is identical to DNA43, a gene identified independently for its putative role in replicating DNA. Two-dimensional DNA gel analysis reveals that the mcm10-1 lesion causes a dramatic reduction in DNA replication initiation at chromosomal origins, including ORI1 and ORI121. Interestingly, the mcm10-1 lesion also causes replication forks to pause during elongation through these same loci. This novel phenotype suggests a unique role for the Mcm10 protein in the initiation of DNA synthesis at replication origins.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1990

The phenotype of the minichromosome maintenance mutant mcm3 is characteristic of mutants defective in DNA replication.

Susan I. Gibson; Richard T. Surosky; Bik Kwoon Tye

MCM3 is an essential gene involved in the maintenance of minichromosomes in yeast cells. It encodes a protein of 971 amino acids that shows striking homology to the Mcm2 protein. We have mapped the mcm3-1 mutation of the left arm of chromosome V approximately 3 kb centromere proximal of anp1. The mcm3-1 mutant was found to be thermosensitive for growth. Under permissive growth conditions, it was defective in minichromosome maintenance in an autonomously replicating sequence-specific manner and showed an increase in chromosome loss and recombination. Under nonpermissive conditions, mcm3-1 exhibited a cell cycle arrest phenotype, arresting at the large-bud stage with an undivided nucleus that had a DNA content of nearly 2n. These phenotypes are consistent with incomplete replication of the genome of the mcm3-1 mutant, possibly as a result of limited replication initiation at selective autonomously replicating sequences leading to cell cycle arrest before mitosis. The phenotype exhibited by the mcm3 mutant is very similar to that of mcm2, suggesting that the Mcm2 and Mcm3 protein may play interacting roles in DNA replication.


Nature | 2015

Structure of the eukaryotic MCM complex at 3.8 Å

Ningning Li; Yuanliang Zhai; Yixiao Zhang; Wanqiu Li; Maojun Yang; Jianlin Lei; Bik Kwoon Tye; Ning Gao

DNA replication in eukaryotes is strictly regulated by several mechanisms. A central step in this replication is the assembly of the heterohexameric minichromosome maintenance (MCM2–7) helicase complex at replication origins during G1 phase as an inactive double hexamer. Here, using cryo-electron microscopy, we report a near-atomic structure of the MCM2–7 double hexamer purified from yeast G1 chromatin. Our structure shows that two single hexamers, arranged in a tilted and twisted fashion through interdigitated amino-terminal domain interactions, form a kinked central channel. Four constricted rings consisting of conserved interior β-hairpins from the two single hexamers create a narrow passageway that tightly fits duplex DNA. This narrow passageway, reinforced by the offset of the two single hexamers at the double hexamer interface, is flanked by two pairs of gate-forming subunits, MCM2 and MCM5. These unusual features of the twisted and tilted single hexamers suggest a concerted mechanism for the melting of origin DNA that requires structural deformation of the intervening DNA.


EMBO Reports | 2002

The Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum MCM protein can form heptameric rings.

Xiong Yu; Margaret S. VanLoock; Andrzej Brunon Poplawski; Zvi Kelman; Tao Xiang; Bik Kwoon Tye; Edward H. Egelman

Mini‐chromosome maintenance (MCM) proteins form a conserved family found in all eukaryotes and are essential for DNA replication. They exist as heteromultimeric complexes containing as many as six different proteins. These complexes are believed to be the replicative helicases, functioning as hexameric rings at replication forks. In most archaea a single MCM protein exists. The protein from Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum (mtMCM) has been reported to assemble into a large complex consistent with a dodecamer. We show that mtMCM can assemble into a heptameric ring. This ring contains a C‐terminal helicase domain that can be fit with crystal structures of ring helicases and an N‐terminal domain of unknown function. While the structure of the ring is very similar to that of hexameric replicative helicases such as bacteriophage T7 gp4, our results show that such ring structures may not be constrained to have only six subunits.

Collaboration


Dive into the Bik Kwoon Tye's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ivan Liachko

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David Botstein

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yuanliang Zhai

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Randolph C. Elble

Southern Illinois University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge