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Dive into the research topics where Sara L. Holland is active.

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Featured researches published by Sara L. Holland.


Genome Biology | 2007

Application of the comprehensive set of heterozygous yeast deletion mutants to elucidate the molecular basis of cellular chromium toxicity.

Sara L. Holland; Emma Lodwig; Theodora C. Sideri; Tom Reader; Ian Clarke; Konstantinos Gkargkas; David C. Hoyle; Daniela Delneri; Stephen G. Oliver; Simon V. Avery

BackgroundThe serious biological consequences of metal toxicity are well documented, but the key modes of action of most metals are unknown. To help unravel molecular mechanisms underlying the action of chromium, a metal of major toxicological importance, we grew over 6,000 heterozygous yeast mutants in competition in the presence of chromium. Microarray-based screens of these heterozygotes are truly genome-wide as they include both essential and non-essential genes.ResultsThe screening data indicated that proteasomal (protein degradation) activity is crucial for cellular chromium (Cr) resistance. Further investigations showed that Cr causes the accumulation of insoluble and toxic protein aggregates, which predominantly arise from proteins synthesised during Cr exposure. A protein-synthesis defect provoked by Cr was identified as mRNA mistranslation, which was oxygen-dependent. Moreover, Cr exhibited synergistic toxicity with a ribosome-targeting drug (paromomycin) that is known to act via mistranslation, while manipulation of translational accuracy modulated Cr toxicity.ConclusionThe datasets from the heterozygote screen represent an important public resource that may be exploited to discover the toxic mechanisms of chromium. That potential was validated here with the demonstration that mRNA mistranslation is a primary cause of cellular Cr toxicity.


Environmental Microbiology | 2014

Phenotypic heterogeneity is a selected trait in natural yeast populations subject to environmental stress

Sara L. Holland; Tom Reader; Paul S. Dyer; Simon V. Avery

Populations of genetically uniform microorganisms exhibit phenotypic heterogeneity, where individual cells have varying phenotypes. Such phenotypes include fitness-determining traits. Phenotypic heterogeneity has been linked to increased population-level fitness in laboratory studies, but its adaptive significance for wild microorganisms in the natural environment is unknown. Here, we addressed this by testing heterogeneity in yeast isolates from diverse environmental sites, each polluted with a different principal contaminant, as well as from corresponding control locations. We found that cell-to-cell heterogeneity (in resistance to the appropriate principal pollutant) was prevalent in the wild yeast isolates. Moreover, isolates with the highest heterogeneity were consistently observed in the polluted environments, indicating that heterogeneity is positively related to survival in adverse conditions in the wild. This relationship with survival was stronger than for the property of mean resistance (IC50) of an isolate. Therefore, heterogeneity could be the major determinant of microbial survival in adverse conditions. Indeed, growth assays indicated that isolates with high heterogeneities had a significant competitive advantage during stress. Analysis of yeasts after cultivation for ≥ 500 generations additionally showed that high heterogeneity evolved as a heritable trait during stress. The results showed that environmental stress selects for wild microorganisms with high levels of phenotypic heterogeneity.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2012

The essential iron-sulfur protein Rli1 is an important target accounting for inhibition of cell growth by reactive oxygen species

Alawiah Alhebshi; Theodora C. Sideri; Sara L. Holland; Simon V. Avery

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are linked to various degenerative conditions, but it is unclear which molecular target(s) may be the cells primary “Achilles’ heel,” accounting for inhibition by ROS. Our results indicate that the FeS protein Rli1p, with essential and conserved functions in protein synthesis, is an important target of ROS toxicity.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2012

Heterogeneous Expression of the Virulence-Related Adhesin Epa1 between Individual Cells and Strains of the Pathogen Candida glabrata

Samantha C. Halliwell; Matthew C. A. Smith; Philippa Muston; Sara L. Holland; Simon V. Avery

ABSTRACT We investigated the relevance of gene expression heterogeneity to virulence properties of a major fungal pathogen, Candida glabrata. The organisms key virulence-associated factors include glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored adhesins, encoded subtelomerically by the EPA gene family. Individual-cell analyses of expression revealed very striking heterogeneity for Epa1, an adhesin that mediates ∼95% of adherence to epithelial cells in vitro. The heterogeneity in Epa1 was markedly greater than that known for other yeast genes. Sorted cells expressing high or low levels of Epa1 exhibited high and low adherence to epithelial cells, indicating a link between gene expression noise and potential virulence. The phenotypes of sorted subpopulations reverted to mixed phenotypes within a few generations. Variation in single-cell Epa1 protein and mRNA levels was correlated, consistent with transcriptional regulation of heterogeneity. Sir-dependent transcriptional silencing was the primary mechanism driving heterogeneous Epa1 expression in C. glabrata BG2, but not in CBS138 (ATCC 2001). Inefficient silencing in the latter strain was not due to a difference in EPA1 sequence or (sub)telomere length and was overcome by ectopic SIR3 expression. Moreover, differences between strains in the silencing dependence of EPA1 expression were evident across a range of clinical isolates, with heterogeneity being the greatest in strains where EPA1 was subject to silencing. The study shows how heterogeneity can impact the virulence-related properties of C. glabrata cell populations, with potential implications for microbial pathogenesis more broadly.


Toxicological Sciences | 2009

Actin-Mediated Endocytosis Limits Intracellular Cr Accumulation and Cr Toxicity during Chromate Stress

Sara L. Holland; Simon V. Avery

Chromate toxicity is well documented, but the underlying toxic mechanism(s) has yet to be fully elucidated. Following a Cr toxicity screen against > 6000 heterozygous yeast mutants, here we show that Cr resistance requires normal function of the cortical actin cytoskeleton. Furthermore, Cr-stressed yeast cells exhibited an increased number of actin patches, the sites of endocytosis. This was coincident with a marked stimulation of endocytosis following Cr exposure. Genetic dissection of actin nucleation from endocytosis revealed that endocytosis, specifically, was required for Cr resistance. A series of further endocytosis mutants (sac6Delta, chc1Delta, end3Delta) exhibited elevated Cr sensitivity. These mutants also showed markedly elevated cellular Cr accumulation, explaining their sensitivities. In wild-type cells, an initial endocytosis-independent phase of Cr uptake was followed by an endocytosis-dependent decline in Cr accumulation. The results indicate that actin-mediated endocytosis is required to limit Cr accumulation and toxicity. It is proposed that this involves ubiquitin-dependent endocytic inactivation of a plasma membrane Cr transporter(s). We showed that such an action was not dependent on the transporters that have been characterized to date, the sulfate (and chromate) permeases Sul1p and Sul2p.


Toxicology in Vitro | 2010

Chromate-induced sulfur starvation and mRNA mistranslation in yeast are linked in a common mechanism of Cr toxicity

Sara L. Holland; Ekalabya Ghosh; Simon V. Avery

Toxicity of the environmental carcinogen chromate is known to involve sulfur starvation and also error-prone mRNA translation. Here we reconcile those facts using the yeast model. We demonstrate that: (i) cysteine and methionine starvation mimic Cr-induced translation errors, (ii) genetic suppression of S starvation suppresses Cr-induced mistranslation, and (iii) mistranslation requires cysteine and methionine biosynthesis. Therefore, Cr-induced S starvation is the cause of mRNA mistranslation. This establishes a single, novel pathway mediating the toxicity of chromate.


Chemistry & Biology | 2017

Mitochondrial Ferredoxin Determines Vulnerability of Cells to Copper Excess

Cindy Vallières; Sara L. Holland; Simon V. Avery

Summary The essential micronutrient copper is tightly regulated in organisms, as environmental exposure or homeostasis defects can cause toxicity and neurodegenerative disease. The principal target(s) of copper toxicity have not been pinpointed, but one key effect is impaired supply of iron-sulfur (FeS) clusters to the essential protein Rli1 (ABCE1). Here, to find upstream FeS biosynthesis/delivery protein(s) responsible for this, we compared copper sensitivity of yeast-overexpressing candidate targets. Overexpression of the mitochondrial ferredoxin Yah1 produced copper hyper-resistance. 55Fe turnover assays revealed that FeS integrity of Yah1 was particularly vulnerable to copper among the test proteins. Furthermore, destabilization of the FeS domain of Yah1 produced copper hypersensitivity, and YAH1 overexpression rescued Rli1 dysfunction. This copper-resistance function was conserved in the human ferredoxin, Fdx2. The data indicate that the essential mitochondrial ferredoxin is an important copper target, determining a tipping point where plentiful copper supply becomes excessive. This knowledge could help in tackling copper-related diseases.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Novel, Synergistic Antifungal Combinations that Target Translation Fidelity.

Elena Moreno-Martinez; Cindy Vallières; Sara L. Holland; Simon V. Avery

There is an unmet need for new antifungal or fungicide treatments, as resistance to existing treatments grows. Combination treatments help to combat resistance. Here we develop a novel, effective target for combination antifungal therapy. Different aminoglycoside antibiotics combined with different sulphate-transport inhibitors produced strong, synergistic growth-inhibition of several fungi. Combinations decreased the respective MICs by ≥8-fold. Synergy was suppressed in yeast mutants resistant to effects of sulphate-mimetics (like chromate or molybdate) on sulphate transport. By different mechanisms, aminoglycosides and inhibition of sulphate transport cause errors in mRNA translation. The mistranslation rate was stimulated up to 10-fold when the agents were used in combination, consistent with this being the mode of synergistic action. A range of undesirable fungi were susceptible to synergistic inhibition by the combinations, including the human pathogens Candida albicans, C. glabrata and Cryptococcus neoformans, the food spoilage organism Zygosaccharomyces bailii and the phytopathogens Rhizoctonia solani and Zymoseptoria tritici. There was some specificity as certain fungi were unaffected. There was no synergy against bacterial or mammalian cells. The results indicate that translation fidelity is a promising new target for combinatorial treatment of undesirable fungi, the combinations requiring substantially decreased doses of active components compared to each agent alone.


Metallomics | 2011

Chromate toxicity and the role of sulfur

Sara L. Holland; Simon V. Avery


Fungal Biology | 2011

Candida argentea sp. nov., a copper and silver resistant yeast species

Sara L. Holland; Paul S. Dyer; Chris J. Bond; Steve James; Ian N. Roberts; Simon V. Avery

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Simon V. Avery

University of Nottingham

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Paul S. Dyer

University of Nottingham

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Tom Reader

University of Nottingham

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