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Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth J. Grayhack is active.

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Featured researches published by Elizabeth J. Grayhack.


Cell | 1985

Phage lambda gene Q antiterminator recognizes RNA polymerase near the promoter and accelerates it through a pause site

Elizabeth J. Grayhack; Xianjie Yang; Lester F. Lau; Jeffrey W. Roberts

The positive regulator encoded by phage lambda gene Q is a transcription antiterminator that affects RNA polymerase initiating at the phage late gene promoter, but not at other promoters. We show that this nucleotide-sequence-specific interaction of Q protein and RNA polymerase can occur while the enzyme is pausing after 16 nucleotides of the late gene transcript have been made. Furthermore, Q protein chases RNA polymerase from this early pause site, so that it both recognizes the enzyme and changes its transcription properties at this site. We suggest that the ability of Q-modified RNA polymerase to escape this pause reflects the change that allows it to go through terminators. We also show that NusA protein is required for efficient Q protein activity in vitro.


RNA | 2010

Control of translation efficiency in yeast by codon-anticodon interactions.

Daniel P. Letzring; Kimberly M. Dean; Elizabeth J. Grayhack

The choice of synonymous codons used to encode a polypeptide contributes to substantial differences in translation efficiency between genes. However, both the magnitude and the mechanisms of codon-mediated effects are unknown, as neither the effects of individual codons nor the parameters that modulate codon-mediated regulation are understood, particularly in eukaryotes. To explore this problem in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we performed the first systematic analysis of codon effects on expression. We find that the arginine codon CGA is strongly inhibitory, resulting in progressively and sharply reduced expression with increased CGA codon dosage. CGA-mediated inhibition of expression is primarily due to wobble decoding of CGA, since it is nearly completely suppressed by coexpression of an exact match anticodon-mutated tRNA(Arg(UCG)), and is associated with generation of a smaller RNA fragment, likely due to endonucleolytic cleavage at a stalled ribosome. Moreover, CGA codon pairs are more effective inhibitors of expression than individual CGA codons. These results directly implicate decoding by the ribosome and interactions at neighboring sites within the ribosome as mediators of codon-specific translation efficiency.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2004

A Facile Method for High-throughput Co-expression of Protein Pairs

Andrei Alexandrov; Marissa Vignali; Douglas J. LaCount; Erin Quartley; Christina de Vries; Daniela De Rosa; Julie Babulski; Sarah F. Mitchell; Lori W. Schoenfeld; Stanley Fields; Wim G. J. Hol; Mark E. Dumont; Eric M. Phizicky; Elizabeth J. Grayhack

We developed a method to co-express protein pairs from collections of otherwise identical Escherichia coli plasmids expressing different ORFs by incorporating a 61-nucleotide sequence (LINK) into the plasmid to allow generation of tandem plasmids. Tandem plasmids are formed in a ligation-independent manner, propagate efficiently, and produce protein pairs in high quantities. This greatly facilitates co-expression for structural genomics projects that produce thousands of clones bearing identical origins and antibiotic markers.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Depletion of Saccharomyces cerevisiae tRNAHis Guanylyltransferase Thg1p Leads to Uncharged tRNAHis with Additional m5C

Weifeng Gu; Rebecca L. Hurto; Anita K. Hopper; Elizabeth J. Grayhack; Eric M. Phizicky

ABSTRACT The essential Saccharomyces cerevisiae tRNAHis guanylyltransferase (Thg1p) is responsible for the unusual G−1 addition to the 5′ end of cytoplasmic tRNAHis. We report here that tRNAHis from Thg1p-depleted cells is uncharged, although histidyl tRNA synthetase is active and the 3′ end of the tRNA is intact, suggesting that G−1 is a critical determinant for aminoacylation of tRNAHis in vivo. Thg1p depletion leads to activation of the GCN4 pathway, most, but not all, of which is Gcn2p dependent, and to the accumulation of tRNAHis in the nucleus. Surprisingly, tRNAHis in Thg1p-depleted cells accumulates additional m5C modifications, which are delayed relative to the loss of G−1 and aminoacylation. The additional modification is likely due to tRNA m5C methyltransferase Trm4p. We developed a new method to map m5C residues in RNA and localized the additional m5C to positions 48 and 50. This is the first documented example of the accumulation of additional modifications in a eukaryotic tRNA species.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

Pseudouridylation of yeast U2 snRNA is catalyzed by either an RNA-guided or RNA-independent mechanism

Xiaoju Ma; Chunxing Yang; Andrei Alexandrov; Elizabeth J. Grayhack; Isabelle Behm-Ansmant; Yi-Tao Yu

Yeast U2 small nuclear RNA (snRNA) contains three pseudouridines (Ψ35, Ψ42, and Ψ44). Pus7p and Pus1p catalyze the formation of Ψ35 and Ψ44, respectively, but the mechanism of Ψ42 formation remains unclear. Using a U2 substrate containing a single 32P radiolabel at position 42, we screened a GST‐ORF library for pseudouridylase activity. Surprisingly, we found a Ψ42‐specific pseudouridylase activity that coincided with Nhp2p, a protein component of a Box H/ACA sno/scaRNP (small nucleolar/Cajal body‐specific ribonucleoprotein). When isolated by tandem affinity purification (TAP), the other protein components of the H/ACA sno/scaRNP also copurified with the pseudouridylase activity. Micrococcal nuclease‐treated TAP preparations were devoid of pseudouridylase activity; however, activity was restored upon addition of RNAs from TAP preparations. Pseudouridylation reconstitution using RNAs from a Box H/ACA RNA library identified snR81, a snoRNA known to guide rRNA pseudouridylation, as the Ψ42‐specific guide RNA. Using the snR81‐deletion strain, Nhp2p‐ or Cbf5p‐conditional depletion strain, and a cbf5 mutation strain, we further demonstrated that the pseudouridylase activity is dependent on snR81 snoRNP in vivo. Our data indicate that snRNA pseudouridylation can be catalyzed by both RNA‐dependent and RNA‐independent mechanisms.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1997

Multiple phosphorylated forms of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Mcm1 protein include an isoform induced in response to high salt concentrations.

Min Hao Kuo; Elizabeth T. Nadeau; Elizabeth J. Grayhack

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Mcm1 protein is an essential multifunctional transcription factor which is highly homologous to human serum response factor. Mcm1 protein acts on a large number of distinctly regulated genes: haploid cell-type-specific genes, G2-cell-cycle-regulated genes, pheromone-induced genes, arginine metabolic genes, and genes important for cell wall and cell membrane function. We show here that Mcm1 protein is phosphorylated in vivo. Several (more than eight) isoforms of Mcm1 protein, resolved by isoelectric focusing, are present in vivo; two major phosphorylation sites lie in the N-terminal 17 amino acids immediately adjacent to the conserved MADS box DNA-binding domain. The implications of multiple species of Mcm1, particularly the notion that a unique Mcm1 isoform could be required for regulation of a specific set of Mcm1s target genes, are discussed. We also show here that Mcm1 plays an important role in the response to stress caused by NaCl. G. Yu, R. J. Deschenes, and J. S. Fassler (J. Biol. Chem. 270:8739-8743, 1995) showed that Mcm1 function is affected by mutations in the SLN1 gene, a signal transduction component implicated in the response to osmotic stress. We find that mcm1 mutations can confer either reduced or enhanced survival on high-salt medium; deletion of the N terminus or mutation in the primary phosphorylation site results in impaired growth on high-salt medium. Furthermore, Mcm1 protein is a target of a signal transduction system responsive to osmotic stress: a new isoform of Mcm1 is induced by NaCl or KCl; this result establishes that Mcm1 itself is regulated.


Cell | 1982

The phage λ Q gene product: Activity of a transcription antiterminator in vitro

Elizabeth J. Grayhack; Jeffrey W. Roberts

Abstract Phage λ gene Q encodes a positive regulator of phage late gene expression. We show that purified Q gene protein functions as a transcription antiterminator in vitro. It acts at the terminator for λ 6S RNA, a small constitutive transcript that precedes the late genes, thus opening transcription into the entire late gene region. It is active in a purified transcription system consisting otherwise of only RNA polymerase, L factor and DNA containing the region encoding the 6S RNA. Q protein thus acts directly on the transcription complex to alter its response to transcription terminators.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Blocking S-adenosylmethionine synthesis in yeast allows selenomethionine incorporation and multiwavelength anomalous dispersion phasing

Michael G. Malkowski; Erin Quartley; Alan E. Friedman; Julie Babulski; Yoshiko Kon; Jennifer R. Wolfley; Meriem I. Said; Joseph R. Luft; Eric M. Phizicky; George T. DeTitta; Elizabeth J. Grayhack

Saccharomyces cerevisiae is an ideal host from which to obtain high levels of posttranslationally modified eukaryotic proteins for x-ray crystallography. However, extensive replacement of methionine by selenomethionine for anomalous dispersion phasing has proven intractable in yeast. We report a general method to incorporate selenomethionine into proteins expressed in yeast based on manipulation of the appropriate metabolic pathways. sam1− sam2− mutants, in which the conversion of methionine to S-adenosylmethionine is blocked, exhibit reduced selenomethionine toxicity compared with wild-type yeast, increased production of protein during growth in selenomethionine, and efficient replacement of methionine by selenomethionine, based on quantitative mass spectrometry and x-ray crystallography. The structure of yeast tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase was solved to 1.8 Å by using multiwavelength anomalous dispersion phasing with protein that was expressed and purified from the sam1− sam2− strain grown in selenomethionine. Six of eight selenium residues were located in the structure.


RNA | 2013

Translation of CGA codon repeats in yeast involves quality control components and ribosomal protein L1

Daniel P. Letzring; Andrew S. Wolf; Christina E. Brule; Elizabeth J. Grayhack

Translation of CGA codon repeats in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is inefficient, resulting in dose-dependent reduction in expression and in production of an mRNA cleavage product, indicative of a stalled ribosome. Here, we use genetics and translation inhibitors to understand how ribosomes respond to CGA repeats. We find that CGA codon repeats result in a truncated polypeptide that is targeted for degradation by Ltn1, an E3 ubiquitin ligase involved in nonstop decay, although deletion of LTN1 does not improve expression downstream from CGA repeats. Expression downstream from CGA codons at residue 318, but not at residue 4, is improved by deletion of either ASC1 or HEL2, previously implicated in inhibition of translation by polybasic sequences. Thus, translation of CGA repeats likely causes ribosomes to stall and exploits known quality control systems. Expression downstream from CGA repeats at amino acid 4 is improved by paromomycin, an aminoglycoside that relaxes decoding specificity. Paromomycin has no effect if native tRNA(Arg(ICG)) is highly expressed, consistent with the idea that failure to efficiently decode CGA codons might occur in part due to rejection of the cognate tRNA(Arg(ICG)). Furthermore, expression downstream from CGA repeats is improved by inactivation of RPL1B, one of two genes encoding the universally conserved ribosomal protein L1. The effects of rpl1b-Δ and of either paromomycin or tRNA(Arg(ICG)) on CGA decoding are additive, suggesting that the rpl1b-Δ mutant suppresses CGA inhibition by means other than increased acceptance of tRNA(Arg(ICG)). Thus, inefficient decoding of CGA likely involves at least two independent defects in translation.


Cell | 2016

Adjacent Codons Act in Concert to Modulate Translation Efficiency in Yeast

Caitlin E. Gamble; Christina E. Brule; Kimberly M. Dean; Stanley Fields; Elizabeth J. Grayhack

Translation elongation efficiency is largely thought of as the sum of decoding efficiencies for individual codons. Here, we find that adjacent codon pairs modulate translation efficiency. Deploying an approach in Saccharomyces cerevisiae that scored the expression of over 35,000 GFP variants in which three adjacent codons were randomized, we have identified 17 pairs of adjacent codons associated with reduced expression. For many pairs, codon order is obligatory for inhibition, implying a more complex interaction than a simple additive effect. Inhibition mediated by adjacent codons occurs during translation itself as GFP expression is restored by increased tRNA levels or by non-native tRNAs with exact-matching anticodons. Inhibition operates in endogenous genes, based on analysis of ribosome profiling data. Our findings suggest translation efficiency is modulated by an interplay between tRNAs at adjacent sites in the ribosome and that this concerted effect needs to be considered in predicting the functional consequences of codon choice.

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Stanley Fields

University of Washington

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Yoshiko Kon

University of Rochester

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