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Dive into the research topics where María Rodríguez-López is active.

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Featured researches published by María Rodríguez-López.


Epigenetics & Chromatin | 2015

Role of Ccr4-Not complex in heterochromatin formation at meiotic genes and subtelomeres in fission yeast.

Cristina Cotobal; María Rodríguez-López; Caia Deborah Duncan; Ayesha Hasan; Akira Yamashita; Masayuki Yamamoto; Jürg Bähler; Juan Mata

BackgroundHeterochromatin is essential for chromosome segregation, gene silencing and genome integrity. The fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe contains heterochromatin at centromeres, subtelomeres, and mating type genes, as well as at small islands of meiotic genes dispersed across the genome. This heterochromatin is generated by partially redundant mechanisms, including the production of small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) that are incorporated into the RITS protein complex (RNAi-Induced Transcriptional Silencing). The assembly of heterochromatin islands requires the function of the RNA-binding protein Mmi1, which recruits RITS to its mRNA targets and to heterochromatin islands. In addition, Mmi1 directs its targets to an exosome-dependent RNA elimination pathway.ResultsCcr4-Not is a conserved multiprotein complex that regulates gene expression at multiple levels, including RNA degradation and translation. We show here that Ccr4-Not is recruited by Mmi1 to its RNA targets. Surprisingly, Ccr4 and Caf1 (the mRNA deadenylase catalytic subunits of the Ccr4-Not complex) are not necessary for the degradation or translation of Mmi1 RNA targets, but are essential for heterochromatin integrity at Mmi1-dependent islands and, independently of Mmi1, at subtelomeric regions. Both roles require the deadenylase activity of Ccr4 and the Mot2/Not4 protein, a ubiquitin ligase that is also part of the complex. Genetic evidence shows that Ccr4-mediated silencing is essential for normal cell growth, indicating that this novel regulation is physiologically relevant. Moreover, Ccr4 interacts with components of the RITS complex in a Mmi1-independent manner.ConclusionsTaken together, our results demonstrate that the Ccr4-Not complex is required for heterochromatin integrity in both Mmi1-dependent and Mmi1-independent pathways.


Molecular Systems Biology | 2014

Natural genetic variation impacts expression levels of coding, non-coding, and antisense transcripts in fission yeast.

Mathieu Clément-Ziza; Francesc Xavier Marsellach; Sandra Codlin; Manos A. Papadakis; Susanne Reinhardt; María Rodríguez-López; Stuart Martin; Samuel Marguerat; Alexander Schmidt; Eunhye Lee; Christopher T. Workman; Jürg Bähler; Andreas Beyer

Our current understanding of how natural genetic variation affects gene expression beyond well‐annotated coding genes is still limited. The use of deep sequencing technologies for the study of expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) has the potential to close this gap. Here, we generated the first recombinant strain library for fission yeast and conducted an RNA‐seq‐based QTL study of the coding, non‐coding, and antisense transcriptomes. We show that the frequency of distal effects (trans‐eQTLs) greatly exceeds the number of local effects (cis‐eQTLs) and that non‐coding RNAs are as likely to be affected by eQTLs as protein‐coding RNAs. We identified a genetic variation of swc5 that modifies the levels of 871 RNAs, with effects on both sense and antisense transcription, and show that this effect most likely goes through a compromised deposition of the histone variant H2A.Z. The strains, methods, and datasets generated here provide a rich resource for future studies.


G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics | 2015

Parallel Profiling of Fission Yeast Deletion Mutants for Proliferation and for Lifespan During Long-Term Quiescence

Theodora Sideri; Charalampos Rallis; Danny A. Bitton; Bruno M. Lages; Fang Suo; María Rodríguez-López; Li-Lin Du; Jürg Bähler

Genetic factors underlying aging are remarkably conserved from yeast to human. The fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe is an emerging genetic model to analyze cellular aging. Chronological lifespan (CLS) has been studied in stationary-phase yeast cells depleted for glucose, which only survive for a few days. Here, we analyzed CLS in quiescent S. pombe cells deprived of nitrogen, which arrest in a differentiated, G0-like state and survive for more than 2 months. We applied parallel mutant phenotyping by barcode sequencing (Bar-seq) to assay pooled haploid deletion mutants as they aged together during long-term quiescence. As expected, mutants with defects in autophagy or quiescence were under-represented or not detected. Lifespan scores could be calculated for 1199 mutants. We focus the discussion on the 48 most long-lived mutants, including both known aging genes in other model systems and genes not previously implicated in aging. Genes encoding membrane proteins were particularly prominent as pro-aging factors. We independently verified the extended CLS in individual assays for 30 selected mutants, showing the efficacy of the screen. We also applied Bar-seq to profile all pooled deletion mutants for proliferation under a standard growth condition. Unlike for stationary-phase cells, no inverse correlation between growth and CLS of quiescent cells was evident. These screens provide a rich resource for further studies, and they suggest that the quiescence model can provide unique, complementary insights into cellular aging.


Wellcome Open Research | 2017

A CRISPR/Cas9-based method and primer design tool for seamless genome editing in fission yeast

María Rodríguez-López; Cristina Cotobal; Oscar Fernández-Sánchez; Natalia Borbarán Bravo; Risky Oktriani; Heike Abendroth; Dardan Uka; Mimoza Hoti; Jin Wang; Mikel Zaratiegui; Jürg Bähler

In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe the prevailing approach for gene manipulations is based on homologous recombination of a PCR product that contains genomic target sequences and a selectable marker. The CRISPR/Cas9 system has recently been implemented in fission yeast, which allows for seamless genome editing without integration of a selection marker or leaving any other genomic ‘scars’. The published method involves manual design of the single guide RNA (sgRNA), and digestion of a large plasmid with a problematic restriction enzyme to clone the sgRNA. To increase the efficiency of this approach, we have established and optimized a PCR-based system to clone the sgRNA without restriction enzymes into a plasmid with a dominant natMX6 (nourseothricin) selection marker. We also provide a web-tool, CRISPR4P, to support the design of the sgRNAs and the primers required for the entire process of seamless DNA deletion. Moreover, we report the preparation of G1-synchronized and cryopreserved S. pombe cells, which greatly increases the efficiency and speed for transformations, and may also facilitate standard gene manipulations. Applying this optimized CRISPR/Cas9-based approach, we have successfully deleted over 80 different non-coding RNA genes, which are generally lowly expressed, and have inserted 7 point mutations in 4 different genomic regions.


Microbial Cell | 2017

The copper transport-associated protein Ctr4 can form prion-like epigenetic determinants in Schizosaccharomyces pombe

Theodora Sideri; Yoko Yashiroda; David A. Ellis; María Rodríguez-López; Minoru Yoshida; Mick F. Tuite; Jürg Bähler

Prions are protein-based infectious entities associated with fatal brain diseases in animals, but also modify a range of host-cell phenotypes in the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Many questions remain about the evolution and biology of prions. Although several functionally distinct prion-forming proteins exist in S. cerevisiae, [HET-s] of Podospora anserina is the only other known fungal prion. Here we investigated prion-like, protein-based epigenetic transmission in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. We show that S. pombe cells can support the formation and maintenance of the prion form of the S. cerevisiae Sup35 translation factor [PSI+], and that the formation and propagation of these Sup35 aggregates is inhibited by guanidine hydrochloride, indicating commonalities in prion propagation machineries in these evolutionary diverged yeasts. A proteome-wide screen identified the Ctr4 copper transporter subunit as a putative prion with a predicted prion-like domain. Overexpression of the ctr4 gene resulted in large Ctr4 protein aggregates that were both detergent and proteinase-K resistant. Cells carrying such [CTR+] aggregates showed increased sensitivity to oxidative stress, and this phenotype could be transmitted to aggregate-free [ctr-] cells by transformation with [CTR+] cell extracts. Moreover, this [CTR+] phenotype was inherited in a non-Mendelian manner following mating with naïve [ctr-] cells, but intriguingly the [CTR+] phenotype was not eliminated by guanidine-hydrochloride treatment. Thus, Ctr4 exhibits multiple features diagnostic of other fungal prions and is the first example of a prion in fission yeast. These findings suggest that transmissible protein-based determinants of traits may be more widespread among fungi.


RNA | 2018

Long noncoding RNA repertoire and targeting by nuclear exosome, cytoplasmic exonuclease, and RNAi in fission yeast.

Sophie R. Atkinson; Samuel Marguerat; Danny A. Bitton; María Rodríguez-López; Charalampos Rallis; Jean-François Lemay; Cristina Cotobal; Michal Malecki; Pawel Smialowski; Juan Mata; Philipp Korber; François Bachand; Jürg Bähler

Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), which are longer than 200 nucleotides but often unstable, contribute a substantial and diverse portion to pervasive noncoding transcriptomes. Most lncRNAs are poorly annotated and understood, although several play important roles in gene regulation and diseases. Here we systematically uncover and analyze lncRNAs in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Based on RNA-seq data from twelve RNA-processing mutants and nine physiological conditions, we identify 5775 novel lncRNAs, nearly 4× the previously annotated lncRNAs. The expression of most lncRNAs becomes strongly induced under the genetic and physiological perturbations, most notably during late meiosis. Most lncRNAs are cryptic and suppressed by three RNA-processing pathways: the nuclear exosome, cytoplasmic exonuclease, and RNAi. Double-mutant analyses reveal substantial coordination and redundancy among these pathways. We classify lncRNAs by their dominant pathway into cryptic unstable transcripts (CUTs), Xrn1-sensitive unstable transcripts (XUTs), and Dicer-sensitive unstable transcripts (DUTs). XUTs and DUTs are enriched for antisense lncRNAs, while CUTs are often bidirectional and actively translated. The cytoplasmic exonuclease, along with RNAi, dampens the expression of thousands of lncRNAs and mRNAs that become induced during meiosis. Antisense lncRNA expression mostly negatively correlates with sense mRNA expression in the physiological, but not the genetic conditions. Intergenic and bidirectional lncRNAs emerge from nucleosome-depleted regions, upstream of positioned nucleosomes. Our results highlight both similarities and differences to lncRNA regulation in budding yeast. This broad survey of the lncRNA repertoire and characteristics in S. pombe, and the interwoven regulatory pathways that target lncRNAs, provides a rich framework for their further functional analyses.


Genome Biology | 2016

Functional and Regulatory Profiling of Energy Metabolism in Fission Yeast

Michal Malecki; Danny A. Bitton; María Rodríguez-López; Charalampos Rallis; Noelia Garcia Calavia; Graeme C. Smith; Jürg Bähler

BackgroundThe control of energy metabolism is fundamental for cell growth and function and anomalies in it are implicated in complex diseases and ageing. Metabolism in yeast cells can be manipulated by supplying different carbon sources: yeast grown on glucose rapidly proliferates by fermentation, analogous to tumour cells growing by aerobic glycolysis, whereas on non-fermentable carbon sources metabolism shifts towards respiration.ResultsWe screened deletion libraries of fission yeast to identify over 200 genes required for respiratory growth. Growth media and auxotrophic mutants strongly influenced respiratory metabolism. Most genes uncovered in the mutant screens have not been implicated in respiration in budding yeast. We applied gene-expression profiling approaches to compare steady-state fermentative and respiratory growth and to analyse the dynamic adaptation to respiratory growth. The transcript levels of most genes functioning in energy metabolism pathways are coherently tuned, reflecting anticipated differences in metabolic flows between fermenting and respiring cells. We show that acetyl-CoA synthase, rather than citrate lyase, is essential for acetyl-CoA synthesis in fission yeast. We also investigated the transcriptional response to mitochondrial damage by genetic or chemical perturbations, defining a retrograde response that involves the concerted regulation of distinct groups of nuclear genes that may avert harm from mitochondrial malfunction.ConclusionsThis study provides a rich framework of the genetic and regulatory basis of energy metabolism in fission yeast and beyond, and it pinpoints weaknesses of commonly used auxotroph mutants for investigating metabolism. As a model for cellular energy regulation, fission yeast provides an attractive and complementary system to budding yeast.


bioRxiv | 2018

A family of transcription factors that limit lifespan: ETS factors have conserved roles in longevity

Adam J. Dobson; Richard Boulton-McDonald; Lara Houchou; Ziyu Ren; Mimoza Hoti; María Rodríguez-López; Alexis Gkantiragas; Afroditi Gregoriou; Juerg Baehler; Marina Ezcurra; Nazif Alic

Increasing average population age, and the accompanying burden of ill health, is one of the public health crises of our time. Understanding the basic biology of the ageing process may help ameliorate the pathologies that characterise old age. Ageing can be modulated, often through changes in gene expression where regulation of transcription plays a pivotal role. Activities of Forkhead transcription factors (TFs) are known to extend lifespan, but detailed knowledge of the broader transcriptional networks that promote longevity is lacking. This study focuses on the E twenty-six (ETS) family of TFs. This family of TFs is large, conserved across metazoa, and known to play roles in development and cancer, but the role of its members in ageing has not been studied extensively. In Drosophila, an ETS transcriptional repressor, Aop, and an ETS transcriptional activator, Pnt, are known to genetically interact with Foxo and activating Aop is sufficient to extend lifespan. Here, it is shown that Aop and Foxo effect a related gene-expression programme. Additionally, Aop can modulate Foxo’s transcriptional output to moderate or synergise with Foxo activity depending on promoter context, both in vitro and in vivo. In vivo genome-wide mRNA expression analysis in response to Aop, Pnt or Foxo indicated, and further experiments confirmed, that combinatorial activities of the three TFs dictate metabolic status, and that direct reduction of Pnt activity is sufficient to promote longevity. The role of ETS factors in longevity was not limited to Pnt and Aop. Knockdown of Ets21c or Eip74EF in distinct cell types also extended lifespan, revealing that lifespan is limited by transcription from the ETS binding site in multiple cellular contexts. Reducing the activity of the C. elegans ETS TF Lin-1 also extended lifespan, a finding that corroborates established evidence of roles of this TF family in ageing. Altogether, these results reveal the ETS family of TFs as pervasive and evolutionarily conserved brokers of longevity.


bioRxiv | 2018

Fitness Landscape of the Fission Yeast Genome

Leanne Grech; Daniel C. Jeffares; Christoph Yves Sadee; María Rodríguez-López; Danny A. Bitton; Mimoza Hoti; Caroline Biagosch; Dimitra Aravani; Maarten Speekenbrink; Christopher John Illingworth; Philipp H. Schiffer; Alison L. Pidoux; Pin Tong; Victor A. Tallada; Robin C. Allshire; Henry L. Levin; Jürg Bähler

Background Non-protein-coding regions of eukaryotic genomes remain poorly understood. Diversity studies, comparative genomics and biochemical outputs of genomic sites can be indicators of functional elements, but none produce fine-scale genome-wide descriptions of all functional elements. Results Towards the generation of a comprehensive description of functional elements in the haploid Schizosaccharomyces pombe genome, we generated transposon mutagenesis libraries to a density of one insertion per 13 nucleotides of the genome. We applied a five-state hidden Markov model (HMM) to characterise insertion-depleted regions at nucleotide-level resolution. HMM-defined functional constraint was consistent with genetic diversity, comparative genomics, gene-expression data and genome annotation. Conclusions We infer that transposon insertions lead to fitness consequences in 90% of the genome, including 80% of the non-protein-coding regions, reflecting the presence of numerous non-coding elements in this compact genome that have functional roles. Display of this data in genome browsers provides fine-scale views of structure-function relationships within specific genes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

General amino acid control in fission yeast is regulated by a nonconserved transcription factor, with functions analogous to Gcn4/Atf4

Caia Deborah Duncan; María Rodríguez-López; Phil Ruis; Jürg Bähler; Juan Mata

Significance Eukaryotic cells respond to stress conditions by down-regulating general translation while selectively activating translation of genes required to cope with the stress (often encoding bZIP-family transcription factors, such as Gcn4 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Atf4 in mammals). Although the signal transduction pathways that mediate these responses are highly conserved, we report that the downstream transcriptional regulators are not: In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, this response is mediated by a GATA-type transcription factor (Fil1). Surprisingly, although Fil1 lacks any sequence homology to Atf4 and Gcn4, it regulates similar genes and is itself regulated in a similar manner. These results suggest that extensive rewiring has taken place during the evolution of this key response and highlights the plasticity of transcriptional networks. Eukaryotes respond to amino acid starvation by enhancing the translation of mRNAs encoding b-ZIP family transcription factors (GCN4 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and ATF4 in mammals), which launch transcriptional programs to counter this stress. This pathway involves phosphorylation of the eIF2 translation factor by Gcn2-protein kinases and is regulated by upstream ORFs (uORFs) in the GCN4/ATF4 5′ leaders. Here, we present evidence that the transcription factors that mediate this response are not evolutionarily conserved. Although cells of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe respond transcriptionally to amino acid starvation, they lack clear Gcn4 and Atf4 orthologs. We used ribosome profiling to identify mediators of this response in S. pombe, looking for transcription factors that behave like GCN4. We discovered a transcription factor (Fil1) translationally induced by amino acid starvation in a 5′ leader and Gcn2-dependent manner. Like Gcn4, Fil1 is required for the transcriptional response to amino acid starvation, and Gcn4 and Fil1 regulate similar genes. Despite their similarities in regulation, function, and targets, Fil1 and Gcn4 belong to different transcription factor families (GATA and b-ZIP, respectively). Thus, the same functions are performed by nonorthologous proteins under similar regulation. These results highlight the plasticity of transcriptional networks, which maintain conserved principles with nonconserved regulators.

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Jürg Bähler

University College London

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Danny A. Bitton

University College London

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Juan Mata

University of Cambridge

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Michal Malecki

University College London

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Mimoza Hoti

University College London

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David A. Ellis

University College London

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