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Dive into the research topics where Liza S.Z. Larsen is active.

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Featured researches published by Liza S.Z. Larsen.


Yeast | 2006

HB tag modules for PCR-based gene tagging and tandem affinity purification in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Christian Tagwerker; Hongwei Zhang; Xiaorong Wang; Liza S.Z. Larsen; Richard H. Lathrop; G. Wesley Hatfield; Bernhard Auer; Lan Huang; Peter K. Kaiser

We have recently developed the HB tag as a useful tool for tandem‐affinity purification under native as well as fully denaturing conditions. The HB tag and its derivatives consist of a hexahistidine tag and a bacterially‐derived in vivo biotinylation signal peptide, which support sequential purification by Ni2+‐chelate chromatography and binding to immobilized streptavidin. To facilitate tagging of budding yeast proteins with HB tags, we have created a series of plasmids with various selectable markers. These plasmids allow single‐step PCR‐based tagging and expression under control of the endogenous promoters or the inducible GAL1 promoter. HB tagging of several budding yeast ORFs demonstrated efficient biotinylation of the HB tag in vivo by endogenous yeast biotin ligases. No adverse effects of the HB tag on protein function were observed. The HB tagging plasmids presented here are related to previously reported epitope‐tagging plasmids, allowing PCR‐based tagging with the same locus‐specific primer sets that are used for other widely used epitope‐tagging strategies. The Sequences for the described plasmids were submitted to GenBank under Accession Numbers


Journal of Virology | 2008

Ty3 Nucleocapsid Controls Localization of Particle Assembly

Liza S.Z. Larsen; Nadejda Beliakova-Bethell; Virginia Bilanchone; Min Zhang; Anne Lamsa; Rhonda DaSilva; G. Wesley Hatfield; Kunio Nagashima; Suzanne Sandmeyer

ABSTRACT Expression of the budding yeast retrotransposon Ty3 results in production of viruslike particles (VLPs) and retrotransposition. The Ty3 major structural protein, Gag3, similar to retrovirus Gag, is processed into capsid, spacer, and nucleocapsid (NC) during VLP maturation. The 57-amino-acid Ty3 NC protein has 17 basic amino acids and contains one copy of the CX2CX4HX4C zinc-binding motif found in retrovirus NC proteins. Ty3 RNA, protein, and VLPs accumulate in clusters associated with RNA processing bodies (P bodies). This study investigated the role of the NC domain in Ty3-P body clustering and VLP assembly. Fifteen Ty3 NC Ala substitution and deletion mutants were examined using transposition, immunoblot, RNA protection, cDNA synthesis, and multimerization assays. Localization of Ty3 proteins and VLPs was characterized microscopically. Substitutions of each of the conserved residues of the zinc-binding motif resulted in the loss of Ty3 RNA packaging. Substitution of the first two of four conserved residues in this motif caused the loss of Ty3 RNA and protein clustering with P bodies and disrupted particle formation. NC was shown to be a mediator of formation of Ty3 RNA foci and association of Ty3 RNA and protein with P bodies. Mutations that disrupted these NC functions resulted in various degrees of Gag3 nuclear localization and a spectrum of different particle states. Our findings are consistent with the model that Ty3 assembly is associated with P-body components. We hypothesize that the NC domain acts as a molecular switch to control Gag3 conformational states that affect both assembly and localization.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Ty3 Capsid Mutations Reveal Early and Late Functions of the Amino-Terminal Domain

Liza S.Z. Larsen; Min Zhang; Nadejda Beliakova-Bethell; Virginia Bilanchone; Anne Lamsa; Kunio Nagashima; Rani Najdi; Kathryn Kosaka; Vuk Kovacevic; Jianlin Cheng; Pierre Baldi; G. Wesley Hatfield; Suzanne Sandmeyer

ABSTRACT The Ty3 retrotransposon assembles into 50-nm virus-like particles that occur in large intracellular clusters in the case of wild-type (wt) Ty3. Within these particles, maturation of the Gag3 and Gag3-Pol3 polyproteins by Ty3 protease produces the structural proteins capsid (CA), spacer, and nucleocapsid. Secondary and tertiary structure predictions showed that, like retroviral CA, Ty3 CA contains a large amount of helical structure arranged in amino-terminal and carboxyl-terminal bundles. Twenty-six mutants in which alanines were substituted for native residues were used to study CA subdomain functions. Transposition was measured, and particle morphogenesis and localization were characterized by analysis of protein processing, cDNA production, genomic RNA protection, and sedimentation and by fluorescence and electron microscopy. These measures defined five groups of mutants. Proteins from each group could be sedimented in a large complex. Mutations in the amino-terminal domain reduced the formation of fluorescent Ty3 protein foci. In at least one major homology region mutant, Ty3 protein concentrated in foci but no wt clusters of particles were observed. One mutation in the carboxyl-terminal domain shifted assembly from spherical particles to long filaments. Two mutants formed foci separate from P bodies, the proposed sites of assembly, and formed defective particles. P-body association was therefore found to be not necessary for assembly but correlated with the production of functional particles. One mutation in the amino terminus blocked transposition after cDNA synthesis. Our data suggest that Ty3 proteins are concentrated first, assembly associated with P bodies occurs, and particle morphogenesis concludes with a post-reverse transcription, CA-dependent step. Particle formation was generally resistant to localized substitutions, possibly indicating that multiple domains are involved.


International Journal of Bioinformatics Research and Applications | 2008

Computationally Optimised DNA Assembly of synthetic genes

Liza S.Z. Larsen; Christopher D. Wassman; G. Wesley Hatfield; Richard H. Lathrop

Gene synthesis is hampered by two obstacles: improper assembly of oligonucleotides; oligonucleotide defects incurred during chemical synthesis. To overcome the first problem, we describe the employment of a Computationally Optimised DNA Assembly (CODA) algorithm that uses the degeneracy of the genetic code to design overlapping oligonucleotides with thermodynamic properties for self-assembly into a single, linear, DNA product. To address the second problem, we describe a hierarchical assembly strategy that reduces the incorporation of defective oligonucleotides into full-length gene constructs. The CODA algorithm and these biological methods enable fast, simple and reliable assemblies of sequence-correct full-length genes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

The Silent Sway of Splicing by Synonymous Substitutions

William F. Mueller; Liza S.Z. Larsen; Angela Garibaldi; G. Wesley Hatfield; Klemens J. Hertel

Background: The effects of silent mutations on pre-mRNA splicing are poorly understood. Results: Silent mutations can significantly influence exon inclusion and are under purifying selection. Conclusion: Splicing and coding pressures have co-evolved to maintain sufficient exon inclusion levels. Significance: Modified species alignment approaches can be used to identify silent mutations that may alter exon inclusion. Alternative splicing diversifies mRNA transcripts in human cells. This sequence-driven process can be influenced greatly by mutations, even those that do not change the protein coding potential of the transcript. Synonymous mutations have been shown to alter gene expression through modulation of splicing, mRNA stability, and translation. Using a synonymous position mutation library in SMN1 exon 7, we show that 23% of synonymous mutations across the exon decrease exon inclusion, suggesting that nucleotide identity across the entire exon has been evolutionarily optimized to support a particular exon inclusion level. Although phylogenetic conservation scores are insufficient to identify synonymous positions important for exon inclusion, an alignment of organisms filtered based on similar exon/intron architecture is highly successful. Although many of the splicing neutral mutations are observed to occur, none of the exon inclusion reducing mutants was found in the filtered alignment. Using the modified phylogenetic comparison as an approach to evaluate the impact on pre-mRNA splicing suggests that up to 45% of synonymous SNPs are likely to alter pre-mRNA splicing. These results demonstrate that coding and pre-mRNA splicing pressures co-evolve and that a modified phylogenetic comparison based on the exon/intron architecture is a useful tool in identifying splice altering SNPs.


Journal of Virology | 2011

The TY3 Gag3 Spacer Controls Intracellular Condensation and Uncoating

Kristina Clemens; Liza S.Z. Larsen; Min Zhang; Yurii G. Kuznetsov; Virginia Bilanchone; Arlo Randall; Adam Harned; Rhonda DaSilva; Kunio Nagashima; Alexander McPherson; Pierre Baldi; Suzanne Sandmeyer

ABSTRACT Cells expressing the yeast retrotransposon Ty3 form concentrated foci of Ty3 proteins and RNA within which virus-like particle (VLP) assembly occurs. Gag3, the major structural protein of the Ty3 retrotransposon, is composed of capsid (CA), spacer (SP), and nucleocapsid (NC) domains analogous to retroviral domains. Unlike the known SP domains of retroviruses, Ty3 SP is highly acidic. The current studies investigated the role of this domain. Although deletion of Ty3 SP dramatically reduced retrotransposition, significant Gag3 processing and cDNA synthesis occurred. Mutations that interfered with cleavage at the SP-NC junction disrupted CA-SP processing, cDNA synthesis, and electron-dense core formation. Mutations that interfered with cleavage of CA-SP allowed cleavage of the SP-NC junction, production of electron-dense cores, and cDNA synthesis but blocked retrotransposition. A mutant in which acidic residues of SP were replaced with alanine failed to form both Gag3 foci and VLPs. We propose a speculative “spring” model for Gag3 during assembly. In the first phase during concentration of Gag3 into foci, intramolecular interactions between negatively charged SP and positively charged NC domains of Gag3 limit multimerization. In the second phase, the NC domain binds RNA, and the bound form is stabilized by intermolecular interactions with the SP domain. These interactions promote CA domain multimerization. In the third phase, a negatively charged SP domain destabilizes the remaining CA-SP shell for cDNA release.


Virus Research | 2013

Sequence requirements for localization and packaging of Ty3 retroelement RNA.

Kristina Clemens; Virginia Bilanchone; Nadejda Beliakova-Bethell; Liza S.Z. Larsen; Kim Nguyen; Suzanne Sandmeyer

Retroviruses and retrotransposons package genomic RNA into virus-like particles (VLPs) in a poorly understood process. Expression of the budding yeast retrotransposon Ty3 results in the formation of cytoplasmic Ty3 VLP assembly foci comprised of Ty3 RNA and proteins, and cellular factors associated with RNA processing body (PB) components, which modulate translation and effect nonsense-mediated decay (NMD). A series of Ty3 RNA variants were tested to understand the effects of read-through translation via programmed frameshifting on RNA localization and packaging into VLPs, and to identify the roles of coding and non-coding sequences in those processes. These experiments showed that a low level of read-through translation of the downstream open reading frame (as opposed to no translation or translation without frameshifting) is important for localization of full-length Ty3 RNA to foci. Ty3 RNA variants associated with PB components via independent determinants in the native Ty3 untranslated regions (UTRs) and in GAG3-POL3 sequences flanked by UTRs adapted from non-Ty3 transcripts. However, despite localization, RNAs containing GAG3-POL3 but lacking Ty3 UTRs were not packaged efficiently. Surprisingly, sequences within Ty3 UTRs, which bind the initiator tRNA(Met) proposed to provide the dimerization interface, were not required for packaging of full-length Ty3 RNA into VLPs. In summary, our results demonstrate that Gag3 is sufficient and required for localization and packaging of RNAs containing Ty3 UTRs and support a role for POL3 sequences, translation of which is attenuated by programmed frameshifting, in both localization and packaging of the Ty3 full-length gRNA.


Mobile Dna | 2010

Two-hybrid analysis of Ty3 capsid subdomain interactions

Min Zhang; Liza S.Z. Larsen; Becky Irwin; Virginia Bilanchone; Suzanne Sandmeyer

BackgroundThe yeast retrotransposon Ty3 forms stable virus-like particles. Gag3, the major structural protein, is composed of capsid, spacer and nucleocapsid domains. The capsid domain of Gag3 was previously modeled as a structure similar to retrovirus capsid.FindingsTwo-hybrid analysis was used to understand the interactions that contribute to particle assembly. Gag3 interacted with itself as predicted based on its role as the major structural protein. The N-terminal subdomain (NTD) of the capsid was able to interact with itself and with the C-terminal subdomain (CTD) of the capsid, but interacted less well with intact Gag3. Mutations previously shown to block particle assembly disrupted Gag3 interactions more than subdomain interactions.ConclusionsThe findings that the NTD interacts with itself and with the CTD are consistent with previous modeling and a role similar to that of the capsid in retrovirus particle structure. These results are consistent with a model in which the Gag3-Gag3 interactions that initiate assembly differ from the subdomain interactions that potentially underlie particle stability.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Directed DNA Shuffling of Retrovirus and Retrotransposon Integrase Protein Domains

Xiaojie Qi; Edwin Vargas; Liza S.Z. Larsen; Whitney Knapp; G. Wesley Hatfield; Richard H. Lathrop; Suzanne Sandmeyer

Chimeric proteins are used to study protein domain functions and to recombine protein domains for novel or optimal functions. We used a library of chimeric integrase proteins to study DNA integration specificity. The library was constructed using a directed shuffling method that we adapted from fusion PCR. This method easily and accurately shuffles multiple DNA gene sequences simultaneously at specific base-pair positions, such as protein domain boundaries. It produced all 27 properly-ordered combinations of the amino-terminal, catalytic core, and carboxyl-terminal domains of the integrase gene from human immunodeficiency virus, prototype foamy virus, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae retrotransposon Ty3. Retrotransposons can display dramatic position-specific integration specificity compared to retroviruses. The yeast retrotransposon Ty3 integrase interacts with RNA polymerase III transcription factors to target integration at the transcription initiation site. In vitro assays of the native and chimeric proteins showed that human immunodeficiency virus integrase was active with heterologous substrates, whereas prototype foamy virus and Ty3 integrases were not. This observation was consistent with a lower substrate specificity for human immunodeficiency virus integrase than for other retrovirus integrases. All eight chimeras containing the Ty3 integrase carboxyl-terminal domain, a candidate targeting domain, failed to target strand transfer in the presence of the targeting protein, suggesting that multiple domains of the Ty3 integrase cooperate in this function.


Vaccine | 2007

GRA1 protein vaccine confers better immune response compared to codon-optimized GRA1 DNA vaccine

Mert Döşkaya; Mina Kalantari-Dehaghi; Craig M. Walsh; Elżbieta Hiszczyńska-Sawicka; D. Huw Davies; Philip L. Felgner; Liza S.Z. Larsen; Richard H. Lathrop; G. Wesley Hatfield; Jessica R. Schulz; Yüksel Gürüz; Frances Jurnak

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Min Zhang

University of California

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Kunio Nagashima

Science Applications International Corporation

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Becky Irwin

University of California

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Pierre Baldi

University of California

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