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Dive into the research topics where Daniel F. Jarosz is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel F. Jarosz.


Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2010

HSP90 at the hub of protein homeostasis: emerging mechanistic insights

Mikko Taipale; Daniel F. Jarosz; Susan Lindquist

Heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) is a highly conserved molecular chaperone that facilitates the maturation of a wide range of proteins (known as clients). Clients are enriched in signal transducers, including kinases and transcription factors. Therefore, HSP90 regulates diverse cellular functions and exerts marked effects on normal biology, disease and evolutionary processes. Recent structural and functional analyses have provided new insights on the transcriptional and biochemical regulation of HSP90 and the structural dynamics it uses to act on a diverse client repertoire. Comprehensive understanding of how HSP90 functions promises not only to provide new avenues for therapeutic intervention, but to shed light on fundamental biological questions.


Nature | 2012

Prions are a common mechanism for phenotypic inheritance in wild yeasts

Randal Halfmann; Daniel F. Jarosz; Sandra K. Jones; Amelia Chang; Alex K. Lancaster; Susan Lindquist

The self-templating conformations of yeast prion proteins act as epigenetic elements of inheritance. Yeast prions might provide a mechanism for generating heritable phenotypic diversity that promotes survival in fluctuating environments and the evolution of new traits. However, this hypothesis is highly controversial. Prions that create new traits have not been found in wild strains, leading to the perception that they are rare ‘diseases’ of laboratory cultivation. Here we biochemically test approximately 700 wild strains of Saccharomyces for [PSI+] or [MOT3+], and find these prions in many. They conferred diverse phenotypes that were frequently beneficial under selective conditions. Simple meiotic re-assortment of the variation harboured within a strain readily fixed one such trait, making it robust and prion-independent. Finally, we genetically screened for unknown prion elements. Fully one-third of wild strains harboured them. These, too, created diverse, often beneficial phenotypes. Thus, prions broadly govern heritable traits in nature, in a manner that could profoundly expand adaptive opportunities.


Nature | 2006

A single amino acid governs enhanced activity of DinB DNA polymerases on damaged templates

Daniel F. Jarosz; Veronica G. Godoy; James C. Delaney; John M. Essigmann; Graham C. Walker

Translesion synthesis (TLS) by Y-family DNA polymerases is a chief mechanism of DNA damage tolerance. Such TLS can be accurate or error-prone, as it is for bypass of a cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer by DNA polymerase η (XP-V or Rad30) or bypass of a (6-4) TT photoproduct by DNA polymerase V (UmuD′2C), respectively. Although DinB is the only Y-family DNA polymerase conserved among all domains of life, the biological rationale for this striking conservation has remained enigmatic. Here we report that the Escherichia coli dinB gene is required for resistance to some DNA-damaging agents that form adducts at the N2-position of deoxyguanosine (dG). We show that DinB (DNA polymerase IV) catalyses accurate TLS over one such N2-dG adduct (N2-furfuryl-dG), and that DinB and its mammalian orthologue, DNA polymerase κ, insert deoxycytidine (dC) opposite N2-furfuryl-dG with 10–15-fold greater catalytic proficiency than opposite undamaged dG. We also show that mutating a single amino acid, the ‘steric gate’ residue of DinB (Phe13 → Val) and that of its archaeal homologue Dbh (Phe12 → Ala), separates the abilities of these enzymes to perform TLS over N2-dG adducts from their abilities to replicate an undamaged template. We propose that DinB and its orthologues are specialized to catalyse relatively accurate TLS over some N2-dG adducts that are ubiquitous in nature, that lesion bypass occurs more efficiently than synthesis on undamaged DNA, and that this specificity may be achieved at least in part through a lesion-induced conformational change.


Science | 2013

Cryptic variation in morphological evolution: HSP90 as a capacitor for loss of eyes in cavefish.

Nicolas Rohner; Daniel F. Jarosz; Johanna E. Kowalko; Masato Yoshizawa; William R. Jeffery; Richard Borowsky; Susan Lindquist; Clifford J. Tabin

Eye to Eyeless To what extent does adaptation rely on de novo mutation, as opposed to preexisting variation? It has been proposed that heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) can act to maintain cryptic variation by correcting misfolded proteins, until the system is taxed under stress conditions. Focusing on the cavefish Astyanax mexicanus, Rohner et al. (p. 1372) provide evidence that this mechanism contributed to morphological evolution in a natural setting where cryptic variation in eye size was masked by HSP90 in the ancestral river but revealed when the fish were reared and selected in caves. Preexisting but “hidden” variations in eye size provide a substrate for natural selection in fish reared in the dark. In the process of morphological evolution, the extent to which cryptic, preexisting variation provides a substrate for natural selection has been controversial. We provide evidence that heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) phenotypically masks standing eye-size variation in surface populations of the cavefish Astyanax mexicanus. This variation is exposed by HSP90 inhibition and can be selected for, ultimately yielding a reduced-eye phenotype even in the presence of full HSP90 activity. Raising surface fish under conditions found in caves taxes the HSP90 system, unmasking the same phenotypic variation as does direct inhibition of HSP90. These results suggest that cryptic variation played a role in the evolution of eye loss in cavefish and provide the first evidence for HSP90 as a capacitor for morphological evolution in a natural setting.


Annual Review of Genetics | 2010

Protein Homeostasis and the Phenotypic Manifestation of Genetic Diversity: Principles and Mechanisms

Daniel F. Jarosz; Mikko Taipale; Susan Lindquist

Changing a single nucleotide in a genome can have profound consequences under some conditions, but the same change can have no consequences under others. Indeed, organisms can be surprisingly robust to environmental and genetic perturbations. Yet, the mechanisms underlying such robustness are controversial. Moreover, how they might affect evolutionary change remains enigmatic. Here, we review the recently appreciated central role of protein homeostasis in buffering and potentiating genetic variation and discuss how these processes mediate the critical influence of the environment on the relationship between genotype and phenotype. Deciphering how robustness emerges from biological organization and the mechanisms by which it is overcome in changing environments will lead to a more complete understanding of both fundamental evolutionary processes and diverse human diseases.


The EMBO Journal | 2006

Y‐family DNA polymerases respond to DNA damage‐independent inhibition of replication fork progression

Veronica G. Godoy; Daniel F. Jarosz; Fabianne L Walker; Lyle A. Simmons; Graham C. Walker

In Escherichia coli, the Y‐family DNA polymerases Pol IV (DinB) and Pol V (UmuD2′C) enhance cell survival upon DNA damage by bypassing replication‐blocking DNA lesions. We report a unique function for these polymerases when DNA replication fork progression is arrested not by exogenous DNA damage, but with hydroxyurea (HU), thereby inhibiting ribonucleotide reductase, and bringing about damage‐independent DNA replication stalling. Remarkably, the umuC122∷Tn5 allele of umuC, dinB, and certain forms of umuD gene products endow E. coli with the ability to withstand HU treatment (HUR). The catalytic activities of the UmuC122 and DinB proteins are both required for HUR. Moreover, the lethality brought about by such stalled replication forks in the wild‐type derivatives appears to proceed through the toxin/antitoxin pairs mazEF and relBE. This novel function reveals a role for Y‐family polymerases in enhancing cell survival under conditions of nucleotide starvation, in addition to their established functions in response to DNA damage.


Cell | 2016

Intrinsically Disordered Proteins Drive Emergence and Inheritance of Biological Traits

Sohini Chakrabortee; James S. Byers; Sandra K. Jones; David M. Garcia; Bhupinder Bhullar; Amelia Chang; Richard She; Laura R. Lee; Brayon J. Fremin; Susan Lindquist; Daniel F. Jarosz

Prions are a paradigm-shifting mechanism of inheritance in which phenotypes are encoded by self-templating protein conformations rather than nucleic acids. Here, we examine the breadth of protein-based inheritance across the yeast proteome by assessing the ability of nearly every open reading frame (ORF; ∼5,300 ORFs) to induce heritable traits. Transient overexpression of nearly 50 proteins created traits that remained heritable long after their expression returned to normal. These traits were beneficial, had prion-like patterns of inheritance, were common in wild yeasts, and could be transmitted to naive cells with protein alone. Most inducing proteins were not known prions and did not form amyloid. Instead, they are highly enriched in nucleic acid binding proteins with large intrinsically disordered domains that have been widely conserved across evolution. Thus, our data establish a common type of protein-based inheritance through which intrinsically disordered proteins can drive the emergence of new traits and adaptive opportunities.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

DNA polymerase V allows bypass of toxic guanine oxidation products in vivo

William L. Neeley; Sarah Delaney; Yuriy O. Alekseyev; Daniel F. Jarosz; James C. Delaney; Graham C. Walker; John M. Essigmann

Reactive oxygen and nitrogen radicals produced during metabolic processes, such as respiration and inflammation, combine with DNA to form many lesions primarily at guanine sites. Understanding the roles of the polymerases responsible for the processing of these products to mutations could illuminate molecular mechanisms that correlate oxidative stress with cancer. Using M13 viral genomes engineered to contain single DNA lesions and Escherichia coli strains with specific polymerase (pol) knockouts, we show that pol V is required for efficient bypass of structurally diverse, highly mutagenic guanine oxidation products in vivo. We also find that pol IV participates in the bypass of two spiroiminodihydantoin lesions. Furthermore, we report that one lesion, 5-guanidino-4-nitroimidazole, is a substrate for multiple SOS polymerases, whereby pol II is necessary for error-free replication and pol V for error-prone replication past this lesion. The results spotlight a major role for pol V and minor roles for pol II and pol IV in the mechanism of guanine oxidation mutagenesis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

A DinB variant reveals diverse physiological consequences of incomplete TLS extension by a Y-family DNA polymerase

Daniel F. Jarosz; Susan E. Cohen; James C. Delaney; John M. Essigmann; Graham C. Walker

The only Y-family DNA polymerase conserved among all domains of life, DinB and its mammalian ortholog pol κ, catalyzes proficient bypass of damaged DNA in translesion synthesis (TLS). Y-family DNA polymerases, including DinB, have been implicated in diverse biological phenomena ranging from adaptive mutagenesis in bacteria to several human cancers. Complete TLS requires dNTP insertion opposite a replication blocking lesion and subsequent extension with several dNTP additions. Here we report remarkably proficient TLS extension by DinB from Escherichia coli. We also describe a TLS DNA polymerase variant generated by mutation of an evolutionarily conserved tyrosine (Y79). This mutant DinB protein is capable of catalyzing dNTP insertion opposite a replication-blocking lesion, but cannot complete TLS, stalling three nucleotides after an N2-dG adduct. Strikingly, expression of this variant transforms a bacteriostatic DNA damaging agent into a bactericidal drug, resulting in profound toxicity even in a dinB+ background. We find that this phenomenon is not exclusively due to a futile cycle of abortive TLS followed by exonucleolytic reversal. Rather, gene products with roles in cell death and metal homeostasis modulate the toxicity of DinB(Y79L) expression. Together, these results indicate that DinB is specialized to perform remarkably proficient insertion and extension on damaged DNA, and also expose unexpected connections between TLS and cell fate.


Cell Cycle | 2007

Proficient and Accurate Bypass of Persistent DNA Lesions by DinB DNA Polymerases

Daniel F. Jarosz; Veronica G. Godoy; Graham C. Walker

Despite nearly universal conservation through evolution, the precise function of the DinB/pol κ branch of the Y-family of DNA polymerases has remained unclear. Recent results suggest that DinB orthologs from all domains of life proficiently bypass replication blocking lesions that may be recalcitrant to DNA repair mechanisms. Like other translesion DNA polymerases, the error frequency of DinB and its orthologs is higher than the DNA polymerases that replicate the majority of the genome. However, recent results suggest that some Y-family polymerases, including DinB and pol κ, bypass certain types of DNA damage with greater proficiency than an undamaged template. Moreover, they do so relatively accurately. The ability to employ this mechanism to manage DNA damage may be especially important for types of DNA modification that elude repair mechanisms. For these lesions, translesion synthesis may represent a more important line of defense than for other types of DNA damage that are more easily dealt with by other more accurate mechanisms.

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Susan Lindquist

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Graham C. Walker

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Veronica G. Godoy

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Alex K. Lancaster

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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James C. Delaney

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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