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Dive into the research topics where Jure Piškur is active.

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Featured researches published by Jure Piškur.


Nature | 2003

Yeast genome duplication was followed by asynchronous differentiation of duplicated genes

Rikke Breinhold Langkjær; Paul F. Cliften; Mark Johnston; Jure Piškur

Gene redundancy has been observed in yeast, plant and human genomes, and is thought to be a consequence of whole-genome duplications. Bakers yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, contains several hundred duplicated genes. Duplication(s) could have occurred before or after a given speciation. To understand the evolution of the yeast genome, we analysed orthologues of some of these genes in several related yeast species. On the basis of the inferred phylogeny of each set of genes, we were able to deduce whether the gene duplicated and/or specialized before or after the divergence of two yeast lineages. Here we show that the gene duplications might have occurred as a single event, and that it probably took place before the Saccharomyces and Kluyveromyces lineages diverged from each other. Further evolution of each duplicated gene pair—such as specialization or differentiation of the two copies, or deletion of a single copy—has taken place independently throughout the evolution of these species.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2001

Structural Basis for Substrate Specificities of Cellular Deoxyribonucleoside Kinases.

Kenth Johansson; S. Ramaswamy; Catarina Ljungcrantz; Wolfgang Knecht; Jure Piškur; Birgitte Munch-Petersen; Staffan Eriksson; Hans Eklund

Deoxyribonucleoside kinases phosphorylate deoxyribonucleosides and activate a number of medically important nucleoside analogs. Here we report the structure of the Drosophila deoxyribonucleoside kinase with deoxycytidine bound at the nucleoside binding site and that of the human deoxyguanosine kinase with ATP at the nucleoside substrate binding site. Compared to the human kinase, the Drosophila kinase has a wider substrate cleft, which may be responsible for the broad substrate specificity of this enzyme. The human deoxyguanosine kinase is highly specific for purine substrates; this is apparently due to the presence of Arg 118, which provides favorable hydrogen bonding interactions with the substrate. The two new structures provide an explanation for the substrate specificity of cellular deoxyribonucleoside kinases.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 2004

Horizontal gene transfer promoted evolution of the ability to propagate under anaerobic conditions in yeasts

Zoran Gojkovic; W. Knecht; E. Zameitat; J. Warneboldt; J.-B. Coutelis; Y. Pynyaha; C. Neuveglise; Kasper Møller; M. Löffler; Jure Piškur

The ability to propagate under anaerobic conditions is an essential and unique trait of brewer’s or baker’s yeast (Saccharomyces cervisiae). To understand the evolution of facultative anaerobiosis we studied the dependence of de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis, more precisely the fourth enzymic activity catalysed by dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODase), on the enzymes of the respiratory chain in several yeast species. While the majority of yeasts possess a mitochondrial DHODase, Saccharomyces cerevisiae has a cytoplasmatic enzyme, whose activity is independent of the presence of oxygen. From the phylogenetic point of view, this enzyme is closely related to a bacterial DHODase from Lactococcus lactis. Here we show that S. kluyveri, which separated from the S. cerevisiae lineage more than 100 million years ago, represents an evolutionary intermediate, having both cytoplasmic and mitochondrial DHODases. We show that these two S. kluyveri enzymes, and their coding genes, differ in their dependence on the presence of oxygen. Only the cytoplasmic DHODase promotes growth in the absence of oxygen. Apparently a Saccharomyces yeast progenitor which had a eukaryotic-like mitochondrial DHODase acquired a bacterial gene for DHODase, which subsequently allowed cell growth gradually to become independent of oxygen.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

A few amino acid substitutions can convert deoxyribonucleoside kinase specificity from pyrimidines to purines

Wolfgang Knecht; Michael Sandrini; Kenth Johansson; Hans Eklund; Birgitte Munch-Petersen; Jure Piškur

In mammals, the four native deoxyribonucleosides are phosphorylated to the corresponding monophosphates by four deoxyribonucleoside kinases, which have specialized substrate specificities. These four enzymes are likely to originate from a common progenitor kinase. Insects appear to have only one multisubstrate deoxyribonucleoside kinase (dNK, EC 2.7.1.145), which prefers pyrimidine nucleosides, but can also phosphorylate purine substrates. When the structures of the human deoxyguanosine kinase (dGK, EC 2.7.1.113) and the dNK from Drosophila melanogaster were compared, a limited number of amino acid residues were identified and proposed to be responsible for the substrate specificity. Three of these key residues in Drosophila dNK were then mutagenized and the mutant enzymes were characterized regarding their ability to phosphorylate native deoxyribonucleosides and nucleoside analogs. The mutations converted the dNK substrate specificity from predominantly pyrimidine specific into purine specific. A similar scenario could have been followed during the evolution of kinases. Upon gene duplication of the progenitor kinase, only a limited number of single amino acid changes has taken place in each copy and resulted in substrate‐specialized enzymes.


Trends in Genetics | 2001

Origin of the duplicated regions in the yeast genomes

Jure Piškur

The genome of Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains several duplicated regions. The recent sequencing results of several yeast species suggest that the duplicated regions found in the modern Saccharomyces species are probably the result of a single gross duplication, as well as a series of sporadic independent short-segment duplications. The gross duplication might coincide with the origin of the ability to grow under anaerobic conditions.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

Ability for Anaerobic Growth Is Not Sufficient for Development of the Petite Phenotype in Saccharomyces kluyveri

Kasper Møller; Lisbeth Olsson; Jure Piškur

Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a petite-phenotype-positive (petite-positive) yeast, which can successfully grow in the absence of oxygen. On the other hand, Kluyveromyces lactis as well as many other yeasts are petite negative and cannot grow anaerobically. In this paper, we show that Saccharomyces kluyveri can grow under anaerobic conditions, but while it can generate respiration-deficient mutants, it cannot generate true petite mutants. From a phylogenetic point of view, S. kluyveri is apparently more closely related to S. cerevisiae than to K. lactis. These observations suggest that the progenitor of the modern Saccharomyces and Kluyveromyces yeasts, as well as other related genera, was a petite-negative and aerobic yeast. Upon separation of the K. lactis and S. kluyveri-S. cerevisiae lineages, the latter developed the ability to grow anaerobically. However, while the S. kluyveri lineage has remained petite negative, the lineage leading to the modern Saccharomyces sensu stricto and sensu lato yeasts has developed the petite-positive characteristic.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

The Crystal Structures of Dihydropyrimidinases Reaffirm the Close Relationship between Cyclic Amidohydrolases and Explain Their Substrate Specificity.

Bernhard Lohkamp; Birgit Andersen; Jure Piškur; Doreen Dobritzsch

In eukaryotes, dihydropyrimidinase catalyzes the second step of the reductive pyrimidine degradation, the reversible hydrolytic ring opening of dihydropyrimidines. Here we describe the three-dimensional structures of dihydropyrimidinase from two eukaryotes, the yeast Saccharomyces kluyveri and the slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum, determined and refined to 2.4 and 2.05 Å, respectively. Both enzymes have a (β/α)8-barrel structural core embedding the catalytic di-zinc center, which is accompanied by a smaller β-sandwich domain. Despite loop-forming insertions in the sequence of the yeast enzyme, the overall structures and architectures of the active sites of the dihydropyrimidinases are strikingly similar to each other, as well as to those of hydantoinases, dihydroorotases, and other members of the amidohydrolase superfamily of enzymes. However, formation of the physiologically relevant tetramer shows subtle but nonetheless significant differences. The extension of one of the sheets of the β-sandwich domain across a subunit-subunit interface in yeast dihydropyrimidinase underlines its closer evolutionary relationship to hydantoinases, whereas the slime mold enzyme shows higher similarity to the noncatalytic collapsin-response mediator proteins involved in neuron development. Catalysis is expected to follow a dihydroorotase-like mechanism but in the opposite direction and with a different substrate. Complexes with dihydrouracil and N-carbamyl-β-alanine obtained for the yeast dihydropyrimidinase reveal the mode of substrate and product binding and allow conclusions about what determines substrate specificity, stereoselectivity, and the reaction direction among cyclic amidohydrolases.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Yeast beta-alanine synthase shares a structural scaffold and origin with dizinc-dependent exopeptidases.

Stina Lundgren; Zoran Gojkovic; Jure Piškur; Doreen Dobritzsch

β-Alanine synthase (βAS) is the final enzyme of the reductive pyrimidine catabolic pathway, which is responsible for the breakdown of pyrimidine bases, including several anticancer drugs. In eukaryotes, βASs belong to two subfamilies, which exhibit a low degree of sequence similarity. We determined the structure of βAS from Saccharomyces kluyveri to a resolution of 2.7 Å. The subunit of the homodimeric enzyme consists of two domains: a larger catalytic domain with a dizinc metal center, which represents the active site of βAS, and a smaller domain mediating the majority of the intersubunit contacts. Both domains exhibit a mixed α/β-topology. Surprisingly, the observed high structural homology to a family of dizinc-dependent exopeptidases suggests that these two enzyme groups have a common origin. Alterations in the ligand composition of the metal-binding site can be explained as adjustments to the catalysis of a different reaction, the hydrolysis of an N-carbamyl bond by βAS compared with the hydrolysis of a peptide bond by exopeptidases. In contrast, there is no resemblance to the three-dimensional structure of the functionally closely related N-carbamyl-d-amino acid amidohydrolases. Based on comparative structural analysis and observed deviations in the backbone conformations of the eight copies of the subunit in the asymmetric unit, we suggest that conformational changes occur during each catalytic cycle.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002

Inheritance and organisation of the mitochondrial genome differ between two Saccharomyces yeasts

Randi Føns Petersen; Rikke Breinhold Langkjær; Jeanne Hvidtfeldt; Judita Gartner; William Palmen; David W. Ussery; Jure Piškur

Petite-positive Saccharomyces yeasts can be roughly divided into the sensu stricto, including Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and sensu lato group, including Saccharomyces castellii; the latter was recently studied for transmission and the organisation of its mitochondrial genome. S. castellii mitochondrial molecules (mtDNA) carrying point mutations, which confer antibiotic resistance, behaved in genetic crosses as the corresponding point mutants of S. cerevisiae. While S. castellii generated spontaneous petite mutants in a similar way as S. cerevisiae, the petites exhibited a different inheritance pattern. In crosses with the wild type strains a majority of S. castellii petites was neutral, and the suppressivity in suppressive petites was never over 50%. The two yeasts also differ in organisation of their mtDNA molecules. The 25,753 bp sequence of S. castellii mtDNA was determined and the coding potential of both yeasts is similar. However, the S. castellii intergenic sequences are much shorter and do not contain sequences homologous to the S. cerevisiae biologically active intergenic sequences, as ori/rep/tra, which are responsible for the hyper-suppressive petite phenotype found in S. cerevisiae. The structure of one suppressive S. castellii mutant, CA38, was also determined. Apparently, a short direct intergenic repeat was involved in the generation of this petite mtDNA molecule.


Fems Yeast Research | 2003

High-rate evolution of Saccharomyces sensu lato chromosomes

Mário Špírek; Jun Yang; Casper Groth; Randi Føns Petersen; Rikke Breinhold Langkjær; Elena S. Naumova; Pavol Sulo; Gennadi I. Naumov; Jure Piškur

Forty isolates belonging to the Saccharomyces sensu lato complex were analyzed for one nuclear and two mitochondrial sequences, and for their karyotypes. These data are useful for description and definition of yeast species based on the phylogenetic species concept. The deduced phylogenetic relationships among isolates based on the nuclear and mitochondrial sequences were usually similar, suggesting that horizontal transfer/introgression has not been frequent. The highest degree of polymorphism was observed at the chromosome level. Even isolates which had identical nuclear and mitochondrial sequences often exhibited variation in the number and size of their chromosomes. Apparently, yeast chromosomes have been frequently reshaped and therefore also the position of genes has been dynamic during the evolutionary history of yeasts.

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Wolfgang Knecht

Technical University of Denmark

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Birgitte Munch-Petersen

Technical University of Denmark

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Kasper Møller

Technical University of Denmark

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Zoran Gojkovic

Technical University of Denmark

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Lisbeth Olsson

Chalmers University of Technology

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Jens Nielsen

Chalmers University of Technology

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Leif Søndergaard

Technical University of Denmark

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