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Featured researches published by Guillaume Lesage.


Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews | 2006

Cell Wall Assembly in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Guillaume Lesage; Howard Bussey

SUMMARY An extracellular matrix composed of a layered meshwork of β-glucans, chitin, and mannoproteins encapsulates cells of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This organelle determines cellular morphology and plays a critical role in maintaining cell integrity during cell growth and division, under stress conditions, upon cell fusion in mating, and in the durable ascospore cell wall. Here we assess recent progress in understanding the molecular biology and biochemistry of cell wall synthesis and its remodeling in S. cerevisiae. We then review the regulatory dynamics of cell wall assembly, an area where functional genomics offers new insights into the integration of cell wall growth and morphogenesis with a polarized secretory system that is under cell cycle and cell type program controls.


Genetics | 2004

Analysis of beta-1,3-glucan assembly in Saccharomyces cerevisiae using a synthetic interaction network and altered sensitivity to caspofungin.

Guillaume Lesage; Anne-Marie Sdicu; Patrice Ménard; Jesse Shapiro; Shamiza Hussein; Howard Bussey

Large-scale screening of genetic and chemical-genetic interactions was used to examine the assembly and regulation of β-1,3-glucan in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Using the set of deletion mutants in ∼4600 nonessential genes, we scored synthetic interactions with genes encoding subunits of the β-1,3-glucan synthase (FKS1, FKS2), the glucan synthesis regulator (SMI1/KNR4), and a β-1,3-glucanosyltransferase (GAS1). In the resulting network, FKS1, FKS2, GAS1, and SMI1 are connected to 135 genes in 195 interactions, with 26 of these genes also interacting with CHS3 encoding chitin synthase III. A network core of 51 genes is multiply connected with 112 interactions. Thirty-two of these core genes are known to be involved in cell wall assembly and polarized growth, and 8 genes of unknown function are candidates for involvement in these processes. In parallel, we screened the yeast deletion mutant collection for altered sensitivity to the glucan synthase inhibitor, caspofungin. Deletions in 52 genes led to caspofungin hypersensitivity and those in 39 genes to resistance. Integration of the glucan interaction network with the caspofungin data indicates an overlapping set of genes involved in FKS2 regulation, compensatory chitin synthesis, protein mannosylation, and the PKC1-dependent cell integrity pathway.


BMC Genetics | 2005

An interactional network of genes involved in chitin synthesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Guillaume Lesage; Jesse Shapiro; Charles A. Specht; Anne-Marie Sdicu; Patrice Ménard; Shamiza Hussein; Amy Hin Yan Tong; Charles Boone; Howard Bussey

BackgroundIn S. cerevisiae the β-1,4-linked N-acetylglucosamine polymer, chitin, is synthesized by a family of 3 specialized but interacting chitin synthases encoded by CHS1, CHS2 and CHS3. Chs2p makes chitin in the primary septum, while Chs3p makes chitin in the lateral cell wall and in the bud neck, and can partially compensate for the lack of Chs2p. Chs3p requires a pathway of Bni4p, Chs4p, Chs5p, Chs6p and Chs7p for its localization and activity. Chs1p is thought to have a septum repair function after cell separation. To further explore interactions in the chitin synthase family and to find processes buffering chitin synthesis, we compiled a genetic interaction network of genes showing synthetic interactions with CHS1, CHS3 and genes involved in Chs3p localization and function and made a phenotypic analysis of their mutants.ResultsUsing deletion mutants in CHS1, CHS3, CHS4, CHS5, CHS6, CHS7 and BNI4 in a synthetic genetic array analysis we assembled a network of 316 interactions among 163 genes. The interaction network with CHS3, CHS4, CHS5, CHS6, CHS7 or BNI4 forms a dense neighborhood, with many genes functioning in cell wall assembly or polarized secretion. Chitin levels were altered in 54 of the mutants in individually deleted genes, indicating a functional relationship between them and chitin synthesis. 32 of these mutants triggered the chitin stress response, with elevated chitin levels and a dependence on CHS3. A large fraction of the CHS1-interaction set was distinct from that of the CHS3 network, indicating broad roles for Chs1p in buffering both Chs2p function and more global cell wall robustness.ConclusionBased on their interaction patterns and chitin levels we group interacting mutants into functional categories. Genes interacting with CHS3 are involved in the amelioration of cell wall defects and in septum or bud neck chitin synthesis, and we newly assign a number of genes to these functions. Our genetic analysis of genes not interacting with CHS3 indicate expanded roles for Chs4p, Chs5p and Chs6p in secretory protein trafficking and of Bni4p in bud neck organization.


BMC Genomics | 2008

Genetic interaction network of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae type 1 phosphatase Glc7.

Michael R. Logan; Thao Nguyen; Nicolas Szapiel; James Knockleby; Hanting Por; Megan Zadworny; Michael Neszt; Paul M. Harrison; Howard Bussey; Craig A. Mandato; Jackie Vogel; Guillaume Lesage

BackgroundProtein kinases and phosphatases regulate protein phosphorylation, a critical means of modulating protein function, stability and localization. The identification of functional networks for protein phosphatases has been slow due to their redundant nature and the lack of large-scale analyses. We hypothesized that a genome-scale analysis of genetic interactions using the Synthetic Genetic Array could reveal protein phosphatase functional networks. We apply this approach to the conserved type 1 protein phosphatase Glc7, which regulates numerous cellular processes in budding yeast.ResultsWe created a novel glc7 catalytic mutant (glc7-E101Q). Phenotypic analysis indicates that this novel allele exhibits slow growth and defects in glucose metabolism but normal cell cycle progression and chromosome segregation. This suggests that glc7-E101Q is a hypomorphic glc7 mutant. Synthetic Genetic Array analysis of glc7-E101Q revealed a broad network of 245 synthetic sick/lethal interactions reflecting that many processes are required when Glc7 function is compromised such as histone modification, chromosome segregation and cytokinesis, nutrient sensing and DNA damage. In addition, mitochondrial activity and inheritance and lipid metabolism were identified as new processes involved in buffering Glc7 function. An interaction network among 95 genes genetically interacting with GLC7 was constructed by integration of genetic and physical interaction data. The obtained network has a modular architecture, and the interconnection among the modules reflects the cooperation of the processes buffering Glc7 function.ConclusionWe found 245 genes required for the normal growth of the glc7-E101Q mutant. Functional grouping of these genes and analysis of their physical and genetic interaction patterns bring new information on Glc7-regulated processes.


Science | 2004

Global Mapping of the Yeast Genetic Interaction Network

Amy Hin Yan Tong; Guillaume Lesage; Gary D. Bader; Huiming Ding; Hong Xu; Xiaofeng Xin; James W. Young; Gabriel F. Berriz; Renee L. Brost; Michael Chang; Yiqun Chen; Xin Cheng; Gordon Chua; Helena Friesen; Debra S. Goldberg; Jennifer Haynes; Christine Humphries; Grace He; Shamiza Hussein; Lizhu Ke; Nevan J. Krogan; Zhijian Li; Joshua N. Levinson; Hong Lu; Patrice Ménard; Christella Munyana; Ainslie B. Parsons; Owen Ryan; Raffi Tonikian; Tania M. Roberts


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

Combining biological networks to predict genetic interactions

Sharyl L. Wong; Lan V. Zhang; Amy Hin Yan Tong; Zhijian Li; Debra S. Goldberg; Oliver D. King; Guillaume Lesage; Marc Vidal; Brenda Andrews; Howard Bussey; Charles Boone; Frederick P. Roth


Journal of Biology | 2005

Motifs, themes and thematic maps of an integrated Saccharomyces cerevisiae interaction network

Lan V. Zhang; Oliver D. King; Sharyl L. Wong; Debra S. Goldberg; Amy Hy Tong; Guillaume Lesage; Brenda Andrews; Howard Bussey; Charles Boone; Frederick P. Roth


Microbiology | 2003

A synthetic analysis of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae stress sensor Mid2p, and identification of a Mid2p-interacting protein, Zeo1p, that modulates the PKC1-MPK1 cell integrity pathway

Robin Green; Guillaume Lesage; Anne-Marie Sdicu; Patrice Ménard; Howard Bussey


Current Opinion in Microbiology | 2004

Integrative studies put cell wall synthesis on the yeast functional map

Arnaud Firon; Guillaume Lesage; Howard Bussey


Molecular Pharmacology | 2005

Large-Scale Analysis of Genes that Alter Sensitivity to the Anticancer Drug Tirapazamine in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Karen Hellauer; Guillaume Lesage; Anne-Marie Sdicu; Bernard Turcotte

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