Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Kyle Tsui is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Kyle Tsui.


Molecular Cell | 2008

A Library of Yeast Transcription Factor Motifs Reveals a Widespread Function for Rsc3 in Targeting Nucleosome Exclusion at Promoters

Gwenael Badis; Esther T. Chan; Harm van Bakel; Lourdes Peña-Castillo; Desiree Tillo; Kyle Tsui; Clayton D. Carlson; Andrea J. Gossett; Michael J. Hasinoff; Christopher L. Warren; Marinella Gebbia; Shaheynoor Talukder; Ally Yang; Sanie Mnaimneh; Dimitri Terterov; David Coburn; Ai Li Yeo; Zhen Xuan Yeo; Neil D. Clarke; Jason D. Lieb; Aseem Z. Ansari; Corey Nislow; Timothy R. Hughes

The sequence specificity of DNA-binding proteins is the primary mechanism by which the cell recognizes genomic features. Here, we describe systematic determination of yeast transcription factor DNA-binding specificities. We obtained binding specificities for 112 DNA-binding proteins representing 19 distinct structural classes. One-third of the binding specificities have not been previously reported. Several binding sequences have striking genomic distributions relative to transcription start sites, supporting their biological relevance and suggesting a role in promoter architecture. Among these are Rsc3 binding sequences, containing the core CGCG, which are found preferentially approximately 100 bp upstream of transcription start sites. Mutation of RSC3 results in a dramatic increase in nucleosome occupancy in hundreds of proximal promoters containing a Rsc3 binding element, but has little impact on promoters lacking Rsc3 binding sequences, indicating that Rsc3 plays a broad role in targeting nucleosome exclusion at yeast promoters.


Science | 2012

Global Gene Deletion Analysis Exploring Yeast Filamentous Growth

Owen Ryan; Rebecca S. Shapiro; Christoph F. Kurat; David Mayhew; Anastasia Baryshnikova; Brian L. Chin; Zhen-Yuan Lin; Michael J. Cox; Frederick Vizeacoumar; Doris Cheung; Sondra Bahr; Kyle Tsui; Faiza Tebbji; Adnane Sellam; Fabian Istel; Tobias Schwarzmüller; Todd B. Reynolds; Karl Kuchler; David K. Gifford; Malcolm Whiteway; Guri Giaever; Corey Nislow; Michael Costanzo; Anne-Claude Gingras; Robi D. Mitra; Brenda Andrews; Gerald R. Fink; Leah E. Cowen; Charles Boone

Infectious Phenotype The pathogenic yeast Candida albicans needs to adopt a filamentous form to invade tissues. The distantly related yeast species Saccharomyces cerevisiae also takes on a filamentous form for nutrient foraging. Comparing genome-wide deletion libraries between the two species, Ryan et al. (p. 1353) identified genes involved in three different filamentous yeast phenotypes and found unique genes for each of these phenotypes. However, in addition, core genes, including a previously unknown conserved regulator, appear to have homologous roles in regulating filamentous growth in these distantly related yeast species. Yeast genes involved in the dimorphic switch between cell budding and filamentous growth types are identified. The dimorphic switch from a single-cell budding yeast to a filamentous form enables Saccharomyces cerevisiae to forage for nutrients and the opportunistic pathogen Candida albicans to invade human tissues and evade the immune system. We constructed a genome-wide set of targeted deletion alleles and introduced them into a filamentous S. cerevisiae strain, Σ1278b. We identified genes involved in morphologically distinct forms of filamentation: haploid invasive growth, biofilm formation, and diploid pseudohyphal growth. Unique genes appear to underlie each program, but we also found core genes with general roles in filamentous growth, including MFG1 (YDL233w), whose product binds two morphogenetic transcription factors, Flo8 and Mss11, and functions as a critical transcriptional regulator of filamentous growth in both S. cerevisiae and C. albicans.


Molecular Cell | 2009

Two-Color Cell Array Screen Reveals Interdependent Roles for Histone Chaperones and a Chromatin Boundary Regulator in Histone Gene Repression

Jeffrey Fillingham; Pinay Kainth; Jean-Philippe Lambert; Harm van Bakel; Kyle Tsui; Lourdes Peña-Castillo; Corey Nislow; Daniel Figeys; Timothy R. Hughes; Jack Greenblatt; Brenda Andrews

We describe a fluorescent reporter system that exploits the functional genomic tools available in budding yeast to systematically assess consequences of genetic perturbations on gene expression. We used our Reporter-Synthetic Genetic Array (R-SGA) method to screen for regulators of core histone gene expression. We discovered that the histone chaperone Rtt106 functions in a pathway with two other chaperones, Asf1 and the HIR complex, to create a repressive chromatin structure at core histone promoters. We found that activation of histone (HTA1) gene expression involves both relief of Rtt106-mediated repression by the activity of the histone acetyltransferase Rtt109 and restriction of Rtt106 to the promoter region by the bromodomain-containing protein Yta7. We propose that the maintenance of Asf1/HIR/Rtt106-mediated repressive chromatin domains is the primary mechanism of cell-cycle regulation of histone promoters. Our data suggest that this pathway may represent a chromatin regulatory mechanism that is broadly used across the genome.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

Extensive role of the general regulatory factors, Abf1 and Rap1, in determining genome-wide chromatin structure in budding yeast

Mythily Ganapathi; Michael J. Palumbo; Suraiya A. Ansari; Qiye He; Kyle Tsui; Corey Nislow; Randall H. Morse

The packaging of eukaryotic DNA into chromatin has profound consequences for gene regulation, as well as for other DNA transactions such as recombination, replication and repair. Understanding how this packaging is determined is consequently a pressing problem in molecular genetics. DNA sequence, chromatin remodelers and transcription factors affect chromatin structure, but the scope of these influences on genome-wide nucleosome occupancy patterns remains uncertain. Here, we use high resolution tiling arrays to examine the contributions of two general regulatory factors, Abf1 and Rap1, to nucleosome occupancy in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. These factors have each been shown to bind to a few hundred promoters, but we find here that thousands of loci show localized regions of altered nucleosome occupancy within 1 h of loss of Abf1 or Rap1 binding, and that altered chromatin structure can occur via binding sites having a wide range of affinities. These results indicate that DNA-binding transcription factors affect chromatin structure, and probably dynamics, throughout the genome to a much greater extent than previously appreciated.


PLOS Genetics | 2013

A Compendium of Nucleosome and Transcript Profiles Reveals Determinants of Chromatin Architecture and Transcription

Harm van Bakel; Kyle Tsui; Marinella Gebbia; Sanie Mnaimneh; Timothy R. Hughes; Corey Nislow

Nucleosomes in all eukaryotes examined to date adopt a characteristic architecture within genes and play fundamental roles in regulating transcription, yet the identity and precise roles of many of the trans-acting factors responsible for the establishment and maintenance of this organization remain to be identified. We profiled a compendium of 50 yeast strains carrying conditional alleles or complete deletions of genes involved in transcriptional regulation, histone biology, and chromatin remodeling, as well as compounds that target transcription and histone deacetylases, to assess their respective roles in nucleosome positioning and transcription. We find that nucleosome patterning in genes is affected by many factors, including the CAF-1 complex, Spt10, and Spt21, in addition to previously reported remodeler ATPases and histone chaperones. Disruption of these factors or reductions in histone levels led genic nucleosomes to assume positions more consistent with their intrinsic sequence preferences, with pronounced and specific shifts of the +1 nucleosome relative to the transcription start site. These shifts of +1 nucleosomes appear to have functional consequences, as several affected genes in Ino80 mutants exhibited altered expression responses. Our parallel expression profiling compendium revealed extensive transcription changes in intergenic and antisense regions, most of which occur in regions with altered nucleosome occupancy and positioning. We show that the nucleosome-excluding transcription factors Reb1, Abf1, Tbf1, and Rsc3 suppress cryptic transcripts at their target promoters, while a combined analysis of nucleosome and expression profiles identified 36 novel transcripts that are normally repressed by Tup1/Cyc8. Our data confirm and extend the roles of chromatin remodelers and chaperones as major determinants of genic nucleosome positioning, and these data provide a valuable resource for future studies.


eLife | 2012

Chromatin is an ancient innovation conserved between Archaea and Eukarya.

Ron Ammar; Dax Torti; Kyle Tsui; Marinella Gebbia; Tanja Durbic; Gary D. Bader; Guri Giaever; Corey Nislow

The eukaryotic nucleosome is the fundamental unit of chromatin, comprising a protein octamer that wraps ∼147 bp of DNA and has essential roles in DNA compaction, replication and gene expression. Nucleosomes and chromatin have historically been considered to be unique to eukaryotes, yet studies of select archaea have identified homologs of histone proteins that assemble into tetrameric nucleosomes. Here we report the first archaeal genome-wide nucleosome occupancy map, as observed in the halophile Haloferax volcanii. Nucleosome occupancy was compared with gene expression by compiling a comprehensive transcriptome of Hfx. volcanii. We found that archaeal transcripts possess hallmarks of eukaryotic chromatin structure: nucleosome-depleted regions at transcriptional start sites and conserved −1 and +1 promoter nucleosomes. Our observations demonstrate that histones and chromatin architecture evolved before the divergence of Archaea and Eukarya, suggesting that the fundamental role of chromatin in the regulation of gene expression is ancient. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.00078.001


The EMBO Journal | 2011

The SWI/SNF complex acts to constrain distribution of the centromeric histone variant Cse4

Triantaffyllos Gkikopoulos; Vijender Singh; Kyle Tsui; Salma Awad; Matthew J Renshaw; Pieta Scholfield; Geoffrey J. Barton; Corey Nislow; Tomoyuki U. Tanaka; Tom Owen-Hughes

In order to gain insight into the function of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae SWI/SNF complex, we have identified DNA sequences to which it is bound genomewide. One surprising observation is that the complex is enriched at the centromeres of each chromosome. Deletion of the gene encoding the Snf2 subunit of the complex was found to cause partial redistribution of the centromeric histone variant Cse4 to sites on chromosome arms. Cultures of snf2Δ yeast were found to progress through mitosis slowly. This was dependent on the mitotic checkpoint protein Mad2. In the absence of Mad2, defects in chromosome segregation were observed. In the absence of Snf2, chromatin organisation at centromeres is less distinct. In particular, hypersensitive sites flanking the Cse4 containing nucleosomes are less pronounced. Furthermore, SWI/SNF complex was found to be especially effective in the dissociation of Cse4 containing chromatin in vitro. This suggests a role for Snf2 in the maintenance of point centromeres involving the removal of Cse4 from ectopic sites.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2013

Global analysis of SUMO chain function reveals multiple roles in chromatin regulation

Tharan Srikumar; Megan C. Lewicki; Michael Costanzo; Johnny M. Tkach; Harm van Bakel; Kyle Tsui; Erica S. Johnson; Grant W. Brown; Brenda Andrews; Charles Boone; Guri Giaever; Corey Nislow; Brian Raught

Multiple large-scale analyses in yeast implicate SUMO chain function in the maintenance of higher-order chromatin structure and transcriptional repression of environmental stress response genes.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2011

Evolution of nucleosome occupancy: conservation of global properties and divergence of gene-specific patterns.

Kyle Tsui; Sébastien Dubuis; Marinella Gebbia; Randall H. Morse; Naama Barkai; Itay Tirosh; Corey Nislow

ABSTRACT To examine the role of nucleosome occupancy in the evolution of gene expression, we measured the genome-wide nucleosome profiles of four yeast species, three belonging to the Saccharomyces sensu stricto lineage and the more distantly related Candida glabrata. Nucleosomes and associated promoter elements at C. glabrata genes are typically shifted upstream by ∼20 bp, compared to their orthologs from sensu stricto species. Nonetheless, all species display the same global organization features first described for Saccharomyces cerevisiae: a stereotypical nucleosome organization along genes and a division of promoters into those that contain or lack a pronounced nucleosome-depleted region (NDR), with the latter displaying a more dynamic pattern of gene expression. Despite this global similarity, however, nucleosome occupancy at specific genes diverged extensively between sensu stricto and C. glabrata orthologs (∼50 million years). Orthologs with dynamic expression patterns tend to maintain their lack of NDR, but apart from that, sensu stricto and C. glabrata orthologs are nearly as similar in nucleosome occupancy patterns as nonorthologous genes. This extensive divergence in nucleosome occupancy contrasts with a conserved pattern of gene expression. Thus, while some evolutionary changes in nucleosome occupancy contribute to gene expression divergence, nucleosome occupancy often diverges extensively with apparently little impact on gene expression.


Genes & Development | 2011

Restriction of histone gene transcription to S phase by phosphorylation of a chromatin boundary protein

Christoph F. Kurat; Jean-Philippe Lambert; Dewald van Dyk; Kyle Tsui; Harm van Bakel; Supipi Kaluarachchi; Helena Friesen; Pinay Kainth; Corey Nislow; Daniel Figeys; Jeffrey Fillingham; Brenda Andrews

The cell cycle-regulated expression of core histone genes is required for DNA replication and proper cell cycle progression in eukaryotic cells. Although some factors involved in histone gene transcription are known, the molecular mechanisms that ensure proper induction of histone gene expression during S phase remain enigmatic. Here we demonstrate that S-phase transcription of the model histone gene HTA1 in yeast is regulated by a novel attach-release mechanism involving phosphorylation of the conserved chromatin boundary protein Yta7 by both cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1) and casein kinase 2 (CK2). Outside S phase, integrity of the AAA-ATPase domain is required for Yta7 boundary function, as defined by correct positioning of the histone chaperone Rtt106 and the chromatin remodeling complex RSC. Conversely, in S phase, Yta7 is hyperphosphorylated, causing its release from HTA1 chromatin and productive transcription. Most importantly, abrogation of Yta7 phosphorylation results in constitutive attachment of Yta7 to HTA1 chromatin, preventing efficient transcription post-recruitment of RNA polymerase II (RNAPII). Our study identified the chromatin boundary protein Yta7 as a key regulator that links S-phase kinases with RNAPII function at cell cycle-regulated histone gene promoters.

Collaboration


Dive into the Kyle Tsui's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Corey Nislow

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Harm van Bakel

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Guri Giaever

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge