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Dive into the research topics where Philip Hieter is active.

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Featured researches published by Philip Hieter.


Yeast | 1998

Designer deletion strains derived from Saccharomyces cerevisiae S288C: A useful set of strains and plasmids for PCR‐mediated gene disruption and other applications

Carrie Baker Brachmann; Adrian Davies; Gregory J. Cost; Emerita Caputo; Joachim Li; Philip Hieter; Jef D. Boeke

A set of yeast strains based on Saccharomyces cerevisiae S288C in which commonly used selectable marker genes are deleted by design based on the yeast genome sequence has been constructed and analysed. These strains minimize or eliminate the homology to the corresponding marker genes in commonly used vectors without significantly affecting adjacent gene expression. Because the homology between commonly used auxotrophic marker gene segments and genomic sequences has been largely or completely abolished, these strains will also reduce plasmid integration events which can interfere with a wide variety of molecular genetic applications. We also report the construction of new members of the pRS400 series of vectors, containing the kanMX, ADE2 and MET15 genes.


Gene | 1992

Multifunctional yeast high-copy-number shuttle vectors.

Thomas W. Christianson; Robert S. Sikorski; Michael Dante; James H. Shero; Philip Hieter

A set of four yeast shuttle vectors that incorporate sequences from the Saccharomyces cerevisiae 2 mu endogenous plasmid has been constructed. These yeast episomal plasmid (YEp)-type vectors (pRS420 series) differ only in their yeast selectable markers, HIS3, TRP1, LEU2 or URA3. The pRS420 plasmids are based on the backbone of a multifunctional phagemid, pBluescript II SK+, and share its useful properties for growth in Escherichia coli and manipulation in vitro. The pRS420 plasmids have a copy number of about 20 per cell, equivalent to that of YEp24. During non-selective yeast growth, pRS420 plasmids are lost through mitotic segregation at rates similar to other YEp vectors and yeast centromeric plasmid (YCp) vectors, in the range of 1.5-5% of progeny per doubling. The pRS420 series provides high-copy-number counterparts to the current pRS vectors [Sikorski and Hieter, Genetics 122 (1989) 19-27].


Cell | 1990

A repeating amino acid motif in CDC23 defines a family of proteins and a new relationship among genes required for mitosis and RNA synthesis

Robert S. Sikorski; Mark S. Boguski; Mark Goebl; Philip Hieter

We have identified and characterized a novel, repeating 34 amino acid motif (the TPR motif) that is reiterated several times within the CDC23 gene product of S. cerevisiae. Multiple copies of this motif were discovered in five other proteins, three encoded by cell division cycle genes required to complete mitosis and two involved in RNA synthesis. Quantitative sequence analyses suggest the existence of a common underlying structure in each TPR unit that consists of amphipathic alpha-helical regions punctuated by proline-induced turns. The TPR motif defines a new family of genes and an important structural unit common to several proteins whose functions are required for mitosis and RNA synthesis.


Cell | 1996

Budding yeast SKP1 encodes an evolutionarily conserved kinetochore protein required for cell cycle progression.

Carla Connelly; Philip Hieter

n Abstractn n The budding yeast SKP1gene, identified as a dosage suppressor of a known kinetochore protein mutant, encodes an intrinsic 22.3 kDa subunit of CBF3, a multiprotein complex that binds centromere DNA in vitro. Temperature-sensitive mutations in SKP1 define two distinct phenotypic classes. skp1-4 mutants arrest predominantly as large budded cells with a G2 DNA content and short mitotic spindle, consistent with a role in kinetochore function. skp1-3 mutants, however, arrest predominantly as multiply budded cells with a G1 DNA content, suggesting an additional role during the G1/S phase. Identification of Skp1p homologs from C. elegans, A. thaliana, and H. sapiens indicates that SKP1 is evolutionarily highly conserved. Skp1p therefore represents an intrinsic kinetochore protein conserved throughout eukaryotic evolution and may be directly involved in linking kinetochore function with the cell cycle-regulatory machinery.n n


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1990

Modification and transfer into an embryonal carcinoma cell line of a 360-kilobase human-derived yeast artificial chromosome.

William J. Pavan; Philip Hieter; Roger H. Reeves

A neomycin resistance cassette was integrated into the human-derived insert of a 360-kilobase yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) by targeting homologous recombination to Alu repeat sequences. The modified YAC was transferred into an embryonal carcinoma cell line by using polyethylene glycol-mediated spheroplast fusion. A single copy of the human sequence was introduced intact and stably maintained in the absence of selection for over 40 generations. A substantial portion of the yeast genome was retained in hybrids in addition to the YAC. Hybrid cells containing the YAC retained the ability to differentiate when treated with retinoic acid. This approach provides a powerful tool for in vitro analysis because it can be used to modify any human DNA cloned as a YAC and to transfer large fragments of DNA intact into cultured mammalian cells, thereby facilitating functional studies of genes in the context of extensive flanking DNA sequences.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1994

MDS1, a dosage suppressor of an mck1 mutant, encodes a putative yeast homolog of glycogen synthase kinase 3.

J W Puziss; T A Hardy; R B Johnson; P J Roach; Philip Hieter

The yeast gene MCK1 encodes a serine/threonine protein kinase that is thought to function in regulating kinetochore activity and entry into meiosis. Disruption of MCK1 confers a cold-sensitive phenotype, a temperature-sensitive phenotype, and sensitivity to the microtubule-destabilizing drug benomyl and leads to loss of chromosomes during growth on benomyl. A dosage suppression selection was used to identify genes that, when present at high copy number, could suppress the cold-sensitive phenotype of mck1::HIS3 mutant cells. Several unique classes of clones were identified, and one of these, designated MDS1, has been characterized in some detail. Nucleotide sequence data reveal that MDS1 encodes a serine/threonine protein kinase that is highly homologous to the shaggy/zw3 kinase in Drosophila melanogaster and its functional homolog, glycogen synthase kinase 3, in rats. The presence of MDS1 in high copy number rescues both the cold-sensitive and the temperature-sensitive phenotypes, but not the benomyl-sensitive phenotype, associated with the disruption of MCK1. Analysis of strains harboring an mds1 null mutation demonstrates that MDS1 is not essential during normal vegetative growth but appears to be required for meiosis. Finally, in vitro experiments indicate that the proteins encoded by both MCK1 and MDS1 possess protein kinase activity with substrate specificity similar to that of mammalian glycogen synthase kinase 3.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1993

p62cdc23 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae: a nuclear tetratricopeptide repeat protein with two mutable domains.

Robert S. Sikorski; W A Michaud; Philip Hieter

CDC23 is required in Saccharomyces cerevisiae for cell cycle progression through the G2/M transition. The CDC23 gene product contains tandem, imperfect repeats, termed tetratricopeptide repeats, (TPR) units common to a protein family that includes several other nuclear division CDC genes. In this report we have used mutagenesis to probe the functional significance of the TPR units within CDC23. Analysis of truncated derivatives indicates that the TPR block of CDC23 is necessary for the function or stability of the polypeptide. In-frame deletion of a single TPR unit within the repeat block proved sufficient to inactivate CDC23 in vivo, though this allele could rescue the temperature-sensitive defect of a cdc23 point mutant by intragenic complementation. By both in vitro and in vivo mutagenesis techniques, 17 thermolabile cdc23 alleles were produced and examined. Fourteen alleles contained single amino acid changes that were found to cluster within two distinct mutable domains, one of which encompasses the most canonical TPR unit found in CDC23. In addition, we have characterized CDC23 as a 62-kDa protein (p62cdc23) that is localized to the yeast nucleus. Our mutagenesis results suggest that TPR blocks form an essential domain within members of the TPR family.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1996

Faithful chromosome transmission requires Spt4p, a putative regulator of chromatin structure in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Munira A. Basrai; Jeffrey Kingsbury; Douglas Koshland; Forrest Spencer; Philip Hieter

A chromosome transmission fidelity (ctf) mutant, s138, of Saccharomyces cerevisiae was identified by its centromere (CEN) transcriptional readthrough phenotype, suggesting perturbed kinetochore integrity in vivo. The gene complementing the s138 mutation was found to be identical to the S. cerevisiae SPT4 gene. The s138 mutation is a missense mutation in the second of four conserved cysteine residues positioned similarly to those of zinc finger proteins, and we henceforth refer to the mutation of spt4-138. Both spt4-138 and spt4 delta strains missegregate a chromosome fragment at the permissive temperature, are temperature sensitive for growth at 37 degrees C, and upon a shift to the nonpermissive temperature show an accumulation of large budded cells, each with a nucleus. Previous studies suggest that Spt4p functions in a complex with Spt5p and Spt6p, and we determined that spt6-140 also causes missegregation of a chromosome fragment. Double mutants carrying spt4 delta 2::HIS3 and kinetochore mutation ndc10-42 or ctf13-30 show a synthetic conditional phenotype. Both spt4-138 and spt4 delta strains exhibit synergistic chromosome instability in combination with CEN DNA mutations and show in vitro defects in microtubule binding to minichromosomes. These results indicate that Spt4p plays a role in chromosome segregation. The results of in vivo genetic interactions with mutations in kinetochore proteins and CEN DNA and of in vitro biochemical assays suggest that Spt4p is important for kinetochore function.


Gene | 1991

High-efficiency yeast artificial chromosome fragmentation vectors

William J. Pavan; Philip Hieter; Dorothy D. Sears; Amanda Milgram Burkhoff; Roger H. Reeves

Chromosome fragmentation vectors (CFVs) are used to create deletion derivatives of large fragments of human DNA cloned as yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs). CFVs target insertion of a telomere sequence into the YAC via homologous recombination with Alu repetitive elements. This event results in the loss of all YAC sequences distal to the site of integration. A new series of CFVs has been developed. These vectors target fragmentation to both Alu and LINE human repetitive DNA elements. Recovery of deletion derivatives is ten- to 20-fold more efficient with the new vectors than with those described previously.


Genomics | 1991

Yeast artificial chromosome vectors for efficient clone manipulation and mapping

James H. Shero; Mary Kay McCormick; Philip Hieter

The yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) cloning system allows the cloning of exogenous DNA several hundred kilobases in length. To enhance the usefulness of this technology, yeast artificial chromosome vectors have been designed for efficient clone characterization, manipulation, and mapping. The vectors contain a polylinker with unique EcoRI, BglII, NotI, EagI, SacII, SalI, NruI, NheI, and ClaI cloning sites and T7 bacteriophage promoters positioned to allow the generation of riboprobes from the exogenous DNA ends. Centric and acentric vector arms were constructed as separate plasmids to allow the recovery of both ends of the YAC insert DNA directly in Escherichia coli. In addition, YACs generated using this vector system contain a yeast gene (SUP 11) that allows visual monitoring of YAC stability and copy number.

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Dorothy D. Sears

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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James H. Shero

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Roger H. Reeves

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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William J. Pavan

National Institutes of Health

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Carla Connelly

Johns Hopkins University

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Forrest Spencer

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Michael Dante

Southern Illinois University Carbondale

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Munira A. Basrai

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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