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Dive into the research topics where Dean S. Dawson is active.

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Featured researches published by Dean S. Dawson.


Molecular Microbiology | 2004

Chromosome 1 trisomy compromises the virulence of Candida albicans

Xi Chen; Beatrice B. Magee; Dean S. Dawson; P. T. Magee; Carol A. Kumamoto

Although increases in chromosome copy number typically have devastating developmental consequences in mammals, fungal cells such as Saccharomyces cerevisiae seem to tolerate trisomies without obvious impairment of growth. Here, we demonstrate that two commonly used laboratory strains of the yeast Candida albicans, CAI‐4 and SGY‐243, can carry three copies of chromosome 1. Although the trisomic strains grow well in the laboratory, Ura+ derivatives of CAI‐4, carrying three copies of chromosome 1, are avirulent in the intravenously inoculated mouse model, unlike closely related strains carrying two copies of chromosome 1. Furthermore, changes in chromosome copy number occur during growth in an animal host and during growth in the presence of growth‐inhibiting drugs. These results suggest that chromosome copy number variation provides a mechanism for genetic variation in this asexual organism.


Nature Genetics | 2005

The roles of MAD1, MAD2 and MAD3 in meiotic progression and the segregation of nonexchange chromosomes

Peter S Cheslock; Benedict J Kemp; Rebecca Maxfield Boumil; Dean S. Dawson

Errors in meiotic chromosome segregation are the leading cause of spontaneous abortions and birth defects. In humans, chromosomes that fail to experience crossovers (or exchanges) are error-prone, more likely than exchange chromosomes to mis-segregate in meiosis. We used a yeast model to investigate the mechanisms that partition nonexchange chromosomes. These studies showed that the spindle checkpoint genes MAD1, MAD2 and MAD3 have different roles. We identified a new meiotic role for MAD3; though dispensable for the segregation of exchange chromosomes, it is essential for the segregation of nonexchange chromosomes. This function of Mad3p could also be carried out by human BubR1. MAD1 and MAD2 act in a surveillance mechanism that mediates a metaphase delay in response to nonexchange chromosomes, whereas MAD3 acts as a crucial meiotic timer, mediating a prophase delay in every meiosis. These findings suggest plausible models for the basis of errant meiotic segregation in humans.


Advances in Genetics | 1997

7. Chiasmata, Crossovers, and Meiotic Chromosome Segregation

Carol A. Bascom-Slack; Lyle O. Ross; Dean S. Dawson

Meiotic recombination events are probably critical for the completion of several meiotic processes. In addition, recombination is likely to be involved in the events that lead up to synapsis of homologues in meiotic prophase. Recombination events that ultimately become resolved as exchanges are needed for the formation of chiasmata. Chiasmata maintain the association of paired homologues following loss of the synaptonemal complex and participate in the mechanism that signals that the bivalent has attached to the spindle in a bipolar orientation that will result in meiosis I disjunction.


Current Biology | 2000

Slk19p is necessary to prevent separation of sister chromatids in meiosis I.

Rebecca J. Kamieniecki; Robert M. Q. Shanks; Dean S. Dawson

BACKGROUND A fundamental difference between meiotic and mitotic chromosome segregation is that in meiosis I, sister chromatids remain joined, moving as a unit to one pole of the spindle rather than separating as they do in mitosis. It has long been known that the sustained linkage of sister chromatids through meiotic anaphase I is accomplished by association of the chromatids at the centromere region. The localization of the cohesin Rec8p to the centromeres is essential for maintenance of sister chromatid cohesion through meiosis I, but the molecular basis for the regulation of Rec8p and sister kinetochores in meiosis remains a mystery. RESULTS We show that the SLK19 gene product from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is essential for proper chromosome segregation during meiosis I. When slk19 mutants were induced to sporulate they completed events characteristic of meiotic prophase I, but at the first meiotic division they segregated their sister chromatids to opposite poles at high frequencies. The vast majority of these cells did not perform a second meiotic division and proceeded to form dyads (asci containing two spores). Slk19p was found to localize to centromere regions of chromosomes during meiotic prophase where it remained until anaphase I. In the absence of Slk19p, Rec8p was not maintained at the centromere region through anaphase I as it is in wild-type cells. Finally, we demonstrate that Slk19p appears to function downstream of the meiosis-specific protein Spo13p in control of sister chromatid behavior during meiosis I. CONCLUSIONS Our results suggest that Slk19p is essential at the centromere of meiotic chromosomes to prevent the premature separation of sister chromatids at meiosis I.


Cell Cycle | 2005

FEAR but not MEN genes are required for exit from meiosis I

Rebecca J. Kamieniecki; Li Liu; Dean S. Dawson

Exit from mitosis is regulated by Cdc14, which plays an essential role intriggering cyclin-dependent kinase inactivation. Throughout most of the cell cycle,Cdc14 is sequestered in the nucleolus where it remains inactive. After thecompletion of anaphase, an essential signaling cascade, named the Mitotic ExitNetwork, or MEN, promotes Cdc14 release. Cdc14 is also released from thenucleolus in early anaphase by another, nonessential, pathway called FEAR(CdcFourteen Early Anaphase Release). Separase (Esp1), polo kinase (Cdc5), thekinetochore protein Slk19, and Spo12, whose molecular function remains unknown,have been identified as members of the FEAR pathway. In meiosis, mutations inCDC14 and its FEAR pathway regulators, CDC5, SLK19, and SPO12, all form ascithat contain only two diploid spores because of a defect in the ability to exit meiosisI. Thus although the FEAR pathway is dispensible for mitotic exit it, is essential formeiosis I exit. The way that the genes of the Mitotic Exit Network contribute tocoordinating meiotic progression is less clear. Here, we explore this issue. Ourresults demonstrate that the orderly transition from meiosis I to meiosis II isaccomplished by eliminating MEN function and using the FEAR pathway tomodulate cyclin dependent kinase activity, in part through the actions of SIC1.


Genetics | 2007

Cdc15 is required for spore morphogenesis independently of Cdc14 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

M. Evangelina Pablo-Hernando; Yolanda Arnáiz-Pita; Hideki Nakanishi; Dean S. Dawson; Francisco del Rey; Aaron M. Neiman; Carlos R. Vázquez de Aldana

In Saccharomyces cerevisiae exit from mitosis requires the Cdc14 phosphatase to reverse CDK-mediated phosphorylation. Cdc14 is released from the nucleolus by the Cdc14 early anaphase release (FEAR) and mitotic exit network (MEN) pathways. In meiosis, the FEAR pathway is essential for exit from anaphase I. The MEN component Cdc15 is required for the formation of mature spores. To analyze the role of Cdc15 during sporulation, a conditional mutant in which CDC15 expression was controlled by the CLB2 promoter was used. Cdc15-depleted cells proceeded normally through the meiotic divisions but were unable to properly disassemble meiosis II spindles. The morphology of the prospore membrane was aberrant and failed to capture the nuclear lobes. Cdc15 was not required for Cdc14 release from the nucleoli, but it was essential to maintain Cdc14 released and for its nucleo-cytoplasmic transport. However, cells carrying a CDC14 allele with defects in nuclear export (Cdc14-ΔNES) were able to disassemble the spindle and to complete spore formation, suggesting that the Cdc14 nuclear export defect was not the cause of the phenotypes observed in cdc15 mutants.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1995

The eects of a ring chromosome on the meiotic segregation of other chromosomes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Michele Flatters; Rebecca Maxfield; Dean S. Dawson

Meiotic chromosome segregation must occur with high fidelity in order to prevent the generation of aneuploid cells. We have previously described the identification and genetic characterization of a yeast mutant with defects in meiotic sister-chromatid segregation. We attributed the phenotype in this mutant to a dominant allele, which we referred to as SID1-1. These mutants appeared to exhibit high levels of nondisjunction and precocious separation of sister-chromatids of chromosome III, as well as precocious separation of sister chromatids of chromosome VIII and a univalent artificial chromosome. We show here that the unusual meiotic behavior of chromosome III in these strains is due to the presence of a ring III chromosome, rather than a mutant gene. Additional experiments demonstrate that a ring III/rod III pair alters the meiotic segregation of a univalent artificial chromosome.


Cell Cycle | 2004

Analysis of the kar3 meiotic arrest in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Robert M. Q. Shanks; Carol A. Bascom-Slack; Dean S. Dawson

The motor protein Kar3p and its associated protein Cik1p are essential for passage through meiosis I. In the absence of either protein, meiotic cells arrest in prophase I. Experiments were performed to determine whether the arrest was caused by a structural inability to proceed through meiosis, or by a regulatory mechanism. The data demonstrate that the meiotic arrest is not structural; kar3 and cik1 mutants are able to form normal looking bipolar spindles and divide their DNA into two masses in spo11 mutant backgrounds. To identify the regulatory system necessary for the kar3/cik1 meiotic arrest, we tested whether the arrest could be bypassed by eliminating the pachytene checkpoint or the spindle checkpoint. The arrest is not solely dependent upon the pachytene checkpoint that monitors recombination and aspects of chromosome synapsis. Elimination of the spindle checkpoint failed to allow kar3 mutants to undergo meiosis I nuclear division, but phenotypes of the kar3/spindle checkpoint double mutants suggest that the kar3 meiotic arrest may be mediated by the spindle checkpoint.


Cell Cycle | 2004

Potential Roles for Centromere Pairing in Meiotic Chromosome Segregation

Mara N. Stewart; Dean S. Dawson

One of the key differences between mitosis and meiosis is the necessity for exchange between homologous chromosomes. Crossing-over between homologous chromosomes is essential for proper meiotic chromosome segregation in most organisms, serving the purpose of linking chromosomes to their homologous partners until they segregate from one another at anaphase I. In several organisms it has been shown that occasional pairs of chromosomes that have failed to experience exchange segregate with reduced fidelity compared to exchange chromosomes, but do not segregate randomly. Such observations support the notion that there are mechanisms, beyond exchange, that contribute to meiotic segregation fidelity. Recent findings indicate that active centromere pairing is important for proper kinetochore orientation and consequently, segregation of non-exchange chromosomes. Here we discuss the implications of these findings for the behavior of meiotic chromosomes.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1998

A physical assay for detection of early meiotic recombination intermediates in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Carol A. Bascom-Slack; Dean S. Dawson

Abstract In most eukaryotic organisms, recombination events leading to exchanges between homologous chromosomes link the homologs in a manner that allows their proper attachment to the meiotic spindle. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae these exchanges are initiated in early prophase as double-strand breaks in the DNA. These breaks are processed through a series of intermediates to yield mature crossovers late in prophase. The following experiments were designed to monitor the appearance of the earliest recombinant DNA strands formed in this process. A polymerase chain reaction assay was devised that allows the detection of recombinant strands at a known initiation site for meiotic recombination. The time and rate of appearance of recombinant strands was found to coincide with commitment to recombination, demonstrating that DNA strands bearing sequences from both parental chromosomes are rapidly formed after the initiation of meiotic recombination.

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Lyle O. Ross

Baylor College of Medicine

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