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Dive into the research topics where Jacqueline Hayles is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacqueline Hayles.


Nature Genetics | 2004

Periodic gene expression program of the fission yeast cell cycle

Gabriella Rustici; Juan Mata; Katja Kivinen; Pietro Liò; Christopher J. Penkett; Gavin Burns; Jacqueline Hayles; Alvis Brazma; Paul Nurse; Jürg Bähler

Cell-cycle control of transcription seems to be universal, but little is known about its global conservation and biological significance. We report on the genome-wide transcriptional program of the Schizosaccharomyces pombe cell cycle, identifying 407 periodically expressed genes of which 136 show high-amplitude changes. These genes cluster in four major waves of expression. The forkhead protein Sep1p regulates mitotic genes in the first cluster, including Ace2p, which activates transcription in the second cluster during the M-G1 transition and cytokinesis. Other genes in the second cluster, which are required for G1-S progression, are regulated by the MBF complex independently of Sep1p and Ace2p. The third cluster coincides with S phase and a fourth cluster contains genes weakly regulated during G2 phase. Despite conserved cell-cycle transcription factors, differences in regulatory circuits between fission and budding yeasts are evident, revealing evolutionary plasticity of transcriptional control. Periodic transcription of most genes is not conserved between the two yeasts, except for a core set of ∼40 genes that seem to be universally regulated during the eukaryotic cell cycle and may have key roles in cell-cycle progression.


Nature Biotechnology | 2010

Analysis of a genome-wide set of gene deletions in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe.

Dong Uk Kim; Jacqueline Hayles; Dongsup Kim; Valerie Wood; Han Oh Park; Misun Won; Hyang Sook Yoo; Trevor Duhig; Miyoung Nam; Georgia Palmer; Sangjo Han; Linda Jeffery; Seung Tae Baek; Hyemi Lee; Young Sam Shim; Min-Ho Lee; Lila Kim; Kyung Sun Heo; Eun Joo Noh; Ah Reum Lee; Young Joo Jang; Kyung Sook Chung; Shin Jung Choi; Jo Young Park; Young Woo Park; Hwan Mook Kim; Song Kyu Park; Hae Joon Park; Eun Jung Kang; Hyong Bai Kim

We report the construction and analysis of 4,836 heterozygous diploid deletion mutants covering 98.4% of the fission yeast genome providing a tool for studying eukaryotic biology. Comprehensive gene dispensability comparisons with budding yeast—the only other eukaryote for which a comprehensive knockout library exists—revealed that 83% of single-copy orthologs in the two yeasts had conserved dispensability. Gene dispensability differed for certain pathways between the two yeasts, including mitochondrial translation and cell cycle checkpoint control. We show that fission yeast has more essential genes than budding yeast and that essential genes are more likely than nonessential genes to be present in a single copy, to be broadly conserved and to contain introns. Growth fitness analyses determined sets of haploinsufficient and haploproficient genes for fission yeast, and comparisons with budding yeast identified specific ribosomal proteins and RNA polymerase subunits, which may act more generally to regulate eukaryotic cell growth.


Cell | 1994

Temporal order of S phase and mitosis in fission yeast is determined by the state of the p34cdc2-mitotic B cyclin complex

Jacqueline Hayles; Daniel Fisher; Alison Woollard; Paul Nurse

We show here that the state of the p34cdc2-p56cdc13 mitotic B cyclin complex determines whether a fission yeast cell undergoes S phase or mitosis. Mutants defective for p56cdc13 reset to G1 and rereplicate their DNA, while cells completely lacking the p34cdc2-p56cdc13 complex undergo multiple rounds of S phase. In contrast, formation of the p34cdc2-p56cdc13 complex in G1 promotes cells inappropriately into mitosis. We propose that the temporal order of S phase and mitosis is maintained by the presence or absence of the p34cdc2-p56cdc13 complex.


Science | 2008

Conservation and Rewiring of Functional Modules Revealed by an Epistasis Map in Fission Yeast

Assen Roguev; Sourav Bandyopadhyay; Martin Zofall; Ke Zhang; Tamás Fischer; Sean R. Collins; Hongjing Qu; Michael Shales; Han-Oh Park; Jacqueline Hayles; Kwang-Lae Hoe; Dong-Uk Kim; Trey Ideker; Shiv I. S. Grewal; Jonathan S. Weissman; Nevan J. Krogan

An epistasis map (E-MAP) was constructed in the fission yeast, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, by systematically measuring the phenotypes associated with pairs of mutations. This high-density, quantitative genetic interaction map focused on various aspects of chromosome function, including transcription regulation and DNA repair/replication. The E-MAP uncovered a previously unidentified component of the RNA interference (RNAi) machinery (rsh1) and linked the RNAi pathway to several other biological processes. Comparison of the S. pombe E-MAP to an analogous genetic map from the budding yeast revealed that, whereas negative interactions were conserved between genes involved in similar biological processes, positive interactions and overall genetic profiles between pairs of genes coding for physically associated proteins were even more conserved. Hence, conservation occurs at the level of the functional module (protein complex), but the genetic cross talk between modules can differ substantially.


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

Significant conservation of synthetic lethal genetic interaction networks between distantly related eukaryotes

Scott J. Dixon; Yaroslav Fedyshyn; Judice L. Y. Koh; T. S. Keshava Prasad; Charly Chahwan; Gordon Chua; Kiana Toufighi; Anastasija Baryshnikova; Jacqueline Hayles; Kwang-Lae Hoe; Dong-Uk Kim; Han-Oh Park; Chad L. Myers; Akhilesh Pandey; Daniel Durocher; Brenda Andrews; Charles Boone

Synthetic lethal genetic interaction networks define genes that work together to control essential functions and have been studied extensively in Saccharomyces cerevisiae using the synthetic genetic array (SGA) analysis technique (ScSGA). The extent to which synthetic lethal or other genetic interaction networks are conserved between species remains uncertain. To address this question, we compared literature-curated and experimentally derived genetic interaction networks for two distantly related yeasts, Schizosaccharomyces pombe and S. cerevisiae. We find that 23% of interactions in a novel, high-quality S. pombe literature-curated network are conserved in the existing S. cerevisiae network. Next, we developed a method, called S. pombe SGA analysis (SpSGA), enabling rapid, high-throughput isolation of genetic interactions in this species. Direct comparison by SpSGA and ScSGA of ∼220 genes involved in DNA replication, the DNA damage response, chromatin remodeling, intracellular transport, and other processes revealed that ∼29% of genetic interactions are common to both species, with the remainder exhibiting unique, species-specific patterns of genetic connectivity. We define a conserved yeast network (CYN) composed of 106 genes and 144 interactions and suggest that this network may help understand the shared biology of diverse eukaryotic species.


Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2001

A journey into space

Jacqueline Hayles; Paul Nurse

The fission yeast, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, has been used as a model eukaryote to study processes such as the cell cycle and cell morphology. In this single-celled organism, growing in a straight line and maintaining the nucleus in the centre of the cell depend on intracellular positional information. Microtubules and microtubular transport are important for generating positional information within the fission yeast cell, and these molecular mechanisms are also probably relevant for generating positional information in other eukaryotic cells.


The EMBO Journal | 1986

suc1 is an essential gene involved in both the cell cycle and growth in fission yeast

Jacqueline Hayles; Stephen J. Aves; Paul Nurse

The gene suc1 encodes a product which suppresses certain temperature sensitive mutants of the cell cycle control gene cdc2 of Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Mutants in the suc1 gene or over‐expression of its product leads to delays in mitotic and meiotic nuclear division. Deletion of the suc1 gene is lethal and generates some cells blocked in the cell cycle and others impaired in cellular growth. It is likely that the suc1 gene product binds and forms unstable complexes with the cdc2 protein kinase and with other proteins necessary for the cell cycle and cellular growth. suc1 may have a regulatory role in these processes.


Open Biology | 2013

A genome-wide resource of cell cycle and cell shape genes of fission yeast

Jacqueline Hayles; Valerie Wood; Linda Jeffery; Kwang-Lae Hoe; Dong-Uk Kim; Han-Oh Park; Silvia Salas-Pino; Christian Heichinger; Paul Nurse

To identify near complete sets of genes required for the cell cycle and cell shape, we have visually screened a genome-wide gene deletion library of 4843 fission yeast deletion mutants (95.7% of total protein encoding genes) for their effects on these processes. A total of 513 genes have been identified as being required for cell cycle progression, 276 of which have not been previously described as cell cycle genes. Deletions of a further 333 genes lead to specific alterations in cell shape and another 524 genes result in generally misshapen cells. Here, we provide the first eukaryotic resource of gene deletions, which describes a near genome-wide set of genes required for the cell cycle and cell shape.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Mitochondrial dysfunction increases oxidative stress and decreases chronological life span in fission yeast.

Alice Zuin; Natalia Gabrielli; Isabel A. Calvo; Sarela García-Santamarina; Kwang-Lae Hoe; Dong Uk Kim; Han-Oh Park; Jacqueline Hayles; José Ayté; Elena Hidalgo

Background Oxidative stress is a probable cause of aging and associated diseases. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) originate mainly from endogenous sources, namely the mitochondria. Methodology/Principal Findings We analyzed the effect of aerobic metabolism on oxidative damage in Schizosaccharomyces pombe by global mapping of those genes that are required for growth on both respiratory-proficient media and hydrogen-peroxide-containing fermentable media. Out of a collection of approximately 2700 haploid yeast deletion mutants, 51 were sensitive to both conditions and 19 of these were related to mitochondrial function. Twelve deletion mutants lacked components of the electron transport chain. The growth defects of these mutants can be alleviated by the addition of antioxidants, which points to intrinsic oxidative stress as the origin of the phenotypes observed. These respiration-deficient mutants display elevated steady-state levels of ROS, probably due to enhanced electron leakage from their defective transport chains, which compromises the viability of chronologically-aged cells. Conclusion/Significance Individual mitochondrial dysfunctions have often been described as the cause of diseases or aging, and our global characterization emphasizes the primacy of oxidative stress in the etiology of such processes.


Nature Genetics | 2015

The genomic and phenotypic diversity of Schizosaccharomyces pombe

Daniel C. Jeffares; Charalampos Rallis; Adrien Rieux; Doug Speed; Martin Převorovský; Tobias Mourier; Francesc Xavier Marsellach; Zamin Iqbal; Winston Lau; Tammy M.K. Cheng; Rodrigo Pracana; Michael Mülleder; Jonathan L.D. Lawson; Anatole Chessel; Sendu Bala; Garrett Hellenthal; Brendan O'Fallon; Thomas M. Keane; Jared T. Simpson; Leanne Bischof; Bartłomiej Tomiczek; Danny A. Bitton; Theodora Sideri; Sandra Codlin; Josephine E E U Hellberg; Laurent van Trigt; Linda Jeffery; Juan Juan Li; Sophie R. Atkinson; Malte Thodberg

Natural variation within species reveals aspects of genome evolution and function. The fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe is an important model for eukaryotic biology, but researchers typically use one standard laboratory strain. To extend the usefulness of this model, we surveyed the genomic and phenotypic variation in 161 natural isolates. We sequenced the genomes of all strains, finding moderate genetic diversity (π = 3 × 10−3 substitutions/site) and weak global population structure. We estimate that dispersal of S. pombe began during human antiquity (∼340 BCE), and ancestors of these strains reached the Americas at ∼1623 CE. We quantified 74 traits, finding substantial heritable phenotypic diversity. We conducted 223 genome-wide association studies, with 89 traits showing at least one association. The most significant variant for each trait explained 22% of the phenotypic variance on average, with indels having larger effects than SNPs. This analysis represents a rich resource to examine genotype-phenotype relationships in a tractable model.

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Paul Nurse

Francis Crick Institute

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Kwang-Lae Hoe

Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology

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Valerie Wood

University of Cambridge

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Miyoung Nam

Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology

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Dong Uk Kim

Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology

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