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Dive into the research topics where Cosmin Saveanu is active.

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Featured researches published by Cosmin Saveanu.


Gene | 2003

Ribosome assembly in eukaryotes.

Micheline Fromont-Racine; Bruno Senger; Cosmin Saveanu; Franco Fasiolo

Ribosome synthesis is a highly complex and coordinated process that occurs not only in the nucleolus but also in the nucleoplasm and the cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells. Based on the protein composition of several ribosomal subunit precursors recently characterized in yeast, a total of more than 170 factors are predicted to participate in ribosome biogenesis and the list is still growing. So far the majority of ribosomal factors have been implicated in RNA maturation (nucleotide modification and processing). Recent advances gave insight into the process of ribosome export and assembly. Proteomic approaches have provided the first indications for a ribosome assembly pathway in eukaryotes and confirmed the dynamic character of the whole process.


The EMBO Journal | 2001

Nog2p, a putative GTPase associated with pre‐60S subunits and required for late 60S maturation steps

Cosmin Saveanu; David Bienvenu; Abdelkader Namane; Pierre-Emmanuel Gleizes; Nicole Gas; Alain Jacquier; Micheline Fromont-Racine

Eukaryotic ribosome maturation depends on a set of well ordered processing steps. Here we describe the functional characterization of yeast Nog2p (Ynr053cp), a highly conserved nuclear protein. Nog2p contains a putative GTP‐binding site, which is essential in vivo. Kinetic and steady‐state measurements of the levels of pre‐rRNAs in Nog2p‐depleted cells showed a defect in 5.8S and 25S maturation and a concomitant increase in the levels of both 27SBS and 7SS precursors. We found Nog2p physically associated with large pre‐60S complexes highly enriched in the 27SB and 7S rRNA precursors. These complexes contained, besides a subset of ribosomal proteins, at least two additional factors, Nog1p, another putative GTP‐binding protein, and Rlp24p (Ylr009wp), which belongs to the Rpl24e family of archaeal and eukaryotic ribosomal proteins. In the absence of Nog2p, the pre‐60S ribosomal complexes left the nucleolus, but were retained in the nucleoplasm. These results suggest that transient, possibly GTP‐dependent association of Nog2p with the pre‐ribosomes might trigger late rRNA maturation steps in ribosomal large subunit biogenesis.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2003

Sequential Protein Association with Nascent 60S Ribosomal Particles

Cosmin Saveanu; Abdelkader Namane; Pierre-Emmanuel Gleizes; Alice Lebreton; Jean-Claude Rousselle; Jacqueline Noaillac-Depeyre; Nicole Gas; Alain Jacquier; Micheline Fromont-Racine

ABSTRACT Ribosome biogenesis in eukaryotes depends on the coordinated action of ribosomal and nonribosomal proteins that guide the assembly of preribosomal particles. These intermediate particles follow a maturation pathway in which important changes in their protein composition occur. The mechanisms involved in the coordinated assembly of the ribosomal particles are poorly understood. We show here that the association of preribosomal factors with pre-60S complexes depends on the presence of earlier factors, a phenomenon essential for ribosome biogenesis. The analysis of the composition of purified preribosomal complexes blocked in maturation at specific steps allowed us to propose a model of sequential protein association with, and dissociation from, early pre-60S complexes for several preribosomal factors such as Mak11, Ssf1, Rlp24, Nog1, and Nog2. The presence of either Ssf1 or Nog2 in complexes that contain the 27SB pre-rRNA defines novel, distinct pre-60S particles that contain the same pre-rRNA intermediates and that differ only by the presence or absence of specific proteins. Physical and functional interactions between Rlp24 and Nog1 revealed that the assembly steps are, at least in part, mediated by direct protein-protein interactions.


The EMBO Journal | 2004

The ribosomal protein Rps15p is required for nuclear exit of the 40S subunit precursors in yeast

Isabelle Léger-Silvestre; Philipp Milkereit; Sébastien Ferreira-Cerca; Cosmin Saveanu; Jean-Claude Rousselle; Valérie Choesmel; Cécile Guinefoleau; Nicole Gas; Pierre-Emmanuel Gleizes

We have conducted a genetic screen in order to identify ribosomal proteins of Saccharomyces cerevisiae involved in nuclear export of the small subunit precursors. This has led us to distinguish Rps15p as a protein dispensable for maturation of the pre‐40S particles, but whose assembly into the pre‐ribosomes is a prerequisite to their nuclear exit. Upon depletion of Rps15p, 20S pre‐rRNA is released from the nucleolus and retained in the nucleus, without alteration of the pre‐rRNA early cleavages. In contrast, Rps18p, which contacts Rps15p in the small subunit, is required upstream for pre‐rRNA processing at site A2. Most pre‐40S specific factors are correctly associated with the intermediate particles accumulating in the nucleus upon Rps15p depletion, except the late‐binding proteins Tsr1p and Rio2p. Here we show that these two proteins are dispensable for nuclear exit; instead, they participate in 20S pre‐rRNA processing in the cytoplasm. We conclude that, during the final maturation steps in the nucleus, incorporation of the ribosomal protein Rps15p is specifically required to render the pre‐40S particles competent for translocation to the cytoplasm.


Bioinformatics | 2007

GOlorize: a Cytoscape plug-in for network visualization with Gene Ontology-based layout and coloring

Olivier Garcia; Cosmin Saveanu; Melissa S. Cline; Micheline Fromont-Racine; Alain Jacquier; Benno Schwikowski; Tero Aittokallio

UNLABELLED We have implemented a graph layout algorithm that exposes Gene Ontology (GO) class structure on the network nodes. It can be used in conjunction with BiNGO plug-in to Cytoscape, which finds the GO categories over-represented in a given network. Our plug-in, named GOlorize, first highlights the class members with category-specific color-coding and then constructs an enhanced visualization of the network using a class-directed layout algorithm. AVAILABILITY http://www.cytoscape.org/plugins2.php. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Installation instructions and tutorial at http://www.cytoscape.org/plugins/GOlorize/GOlorizeUserGuide.pdf.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Linking functionally related genes by sensitive and quantitative characterization of genetic interaction profiles

Laurence Decourty; Cosmin Saveanu; Kenza Zemam; Florence Hantraye; Emmanuel Frachon; Jean-Claude Rousselle; Micheline Fromont-Racine; Alain Jacquier

Describing at a genomic scale how mutations in different genes influence one another is essential to the understanding of how genotype correlates with phenotype and remains a major challenge in biology. Previous studies pointed out the need for accurate measurements of not only synthetic but also buffering interactions in the characterization of genetic networks and functional modules. We developed a sensitive and efficient method that allows such measurements at a genomic scale in yeast. In a pilot experiment (41 genome-wide screens), we quantified the fitness of 140,000 double deletion strains relative to the corresponding single mutants and identified many genetic interactions. In addition to synthetic growth defects (validated experimentally with factors newly identified as genetically interfering with mRNA degradation), most of the identified genetic interactions measured weak epistatic effects. These weak effects, rarely meaningful when considered individually, were crucial to defining specific signatures for many gene deletions and had a major contribution in defining clusters of functionally related genes.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2006

A functional network involved in the recycling of nucleocytoplasmic pre-60S factors

Alice Lebreton; Cosmin Saveanu; Laurence Decourty; Jean-Christophe Rain; Alain Jacquier; Micheline Fromont-Racine

Eukaryotic pre-ribosomes go through cytoplasmic maturation steps before entering translation. The nucleocytoplasmic proteins participating in these late stages of maturation are reimported to the nucleus. In this study, we describe a functional network focused on Rei1/Ybr267w, a strictly cytoplasmic pre-60S factor indirectly involved in nuclear 27S pre-ribosomal RNA processing. In the absence of Rei1, the nuclear import of at least three other pre-60S factors is impaired. The accumulation in the cytoplasm of a small complex formed by the association of Arx1 with a novel factor, Alb1/Yjl122w, inhibits the release of the putative antiassociation factor Tif6 from the premature large ribosomal subunits and its recycling to the nucleus. We propose a model in which Rei1 is a key factor for the coordinated dissociation and recycling of the last pre-60S factors before newly synthesized large ribosomal subunits enter translation.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2007

Cytoplasmic recycling of 60S preribosomal factors depends on the AAA protein Drg1.

Brigitte Pertschy; Cosmin Saveanu; Gertrude Zisser; Alice Lebreton; Martin Tengg; Alain Jacquier; Eva Liebminger; Berthold Nobis; Lisa Kappel; Ida van der Klei; Gregor Högenauer; Micheline Fromont-Racine; Helmut Bergler

ABSTRACT Allelic forms of DRG1/AFG2 confer resistance to the drug diazaborine, an inhibitor of ribosome biogenesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Our results show that the AAA-ATPase Drg1 is essential for 60S maturation and associates with 60S precursor particles in the cytoplasm. Functional inactivation of Drg1 leads to an increased cytoplasmic localization of shuttling pre-60S maturation factors like Rlp24, Arx1, and Tif6. Surprisingly, Nog1, a nuclear pre-60S factor, was also relocalized to the cytoplasm under these conditions, suggesting that it is a previously unsuspected shuttling preribosomal factor that is exported with the precursor particles and very rapidly reimported. Proteins that became cytoplasmic under drg1 mutant conditions were blocked on pre-60S particles at a step that precedes the association of Rei1, a later-acting preribosomal factor. A similar cytoplasmic accumulation of Nog1 and Rlp24 in pre-60S-bound form could be seen after overexpression of a dominant-negative Drg1 variant mutated in the D2 ATPase domain. We conclude that the ATPase activity of Drg1 is required for the release of shuttling proteins from the pre-60S particles shortly after their nuclear export. This early cytoplasmic release reaction defines a novel step in eukaryotic ribosome maturation.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008

A Yeast Exosome Cofactor, Mpp6, Functions in RNA Surveillance and in the Degradation of Noncoding RNA Transcripts

Laura Milligan; Laurence Decourty; Cosmin Saveanu; Juri Rappsilber; Hugo Ceulemans; Alain Jacquier; David Tollervey

ABSTRACT A genome-wide screen for synthetic lethal (SL) interactions with loss of the nuclear exosome cofactors Rrp47/Lrp1 or Air1 identified 3′→5′ exonucleases, the THO complex required for mRNP assembly, and Ynr024w (Mpp6). SL interactions with mpp6Δ were confirmed for rrp47Δ and nuclear exosome component Rrp6. The results of bioinformatic analyses revealed homology between Mpp6 and a human exosome cofactor, underlining the high conservation of the RNA surveillance system. Mpp6 is an RNA binding protein that physically associates with the exosome and was localized throughout the nucleus. The results of functional analyses demonstrated roles for Mpp6 in the surveillance of both pre-rRNA and pre-mRNAs and in the degradation of “cryptic” noncoding RNAs (ncRNAs) derived from intergenic regions and the ribosomal DNA spacer heterochromatin. Strikingly, these ncRNAs are also targeted by other exosome cofactors, including Rrp47, the TRAMP complex (which includes Air1), and the Nrd1/Nab3 complex, and are degraded by both Rrp6 and the core exosome. Heterochromatic transcripts and other ncRNAs are characterized by very rapid degradation, and we predict that functional redundancy is an important feature of ncRNA metabolism.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

Gcn4 misregulation reveals a direct role for the evolutionary conserved EKC/KEOPS in the t6A modification of tRNAs

Marie-Claire Daugeron; Tineke L. Lenstra; Martina Frizzarin; Basma El Yacoubi; Xipeng Liu; Agnès Baudin-Baillieu; Philip Lijnzaad; Laurence Decourty; Cosmin Saveanu; Alain Jacquier; Frank C. P. Holstege; Valérie de Crécy-Lagard; Herman van Tilbeurgh; Domenico Libri

The EKC/KEOPS complex is universally conserved in Archaea and Eukarya and has been implicated in several cellular processes, including transcription, telomere homeostasis and genomic instability. However, the molecular function of the complex has remained elusive so far. We analyzed the transcriptome of EKC/KEOPS mutants and observed a specific profile that is highly enriched in targets of the Gcn4p transcriptional activator. GCN4 expression was found to be activated at the translational level in mutants via the defective recognition of the inhibitory upstream ORFs (uORFs) present in its leader. We show that EKC/KEOPS mutants are defective for the N6-threonylcarbamoyl adenosine modification at position 37 (t6A37) of tRNAs decoding ANN codons, which affects initiation at the inhibitory uORFs and provokes Gcn4 de-repression. Structural modeling reveals similarities between Kae1 and bacterial enzymes involved in carbamoylation reactions analogous to t6A37 formation, supporting a direct role for the EKC in tRNA modification. These findings are further supported by strong genetic interactions of EKC mutants with a translation initiation factor and with threonine biosynthesis genes. Overall, our data provide a novel twist to understanding the primary function of the EKC/KEOPS and its impact on several essential cellular functions like transcription and telomere homeostasis.

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Alice Lebreton

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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