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Dive into the research topics where Ted Jones is active.

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Featured researches published by Ted Jones.


Nature Genetics | 1999

Genomic profiling of drug sensitivities via induced haploinsufficiency

Guri Giaever; Daniel D. Shoemaker; Ted Jones; Hong Liang; Elizabeth Winzeler; Anna Astromoff; Ronald W. Davis

Lowering the dosage of a single gene from two copies to one copy in diploid yeast results in a heterozygote that is sensitized to any drug that acts on the product of this gene. This haploinsufficient phenotype thereby identifies the gene product of the heterozygous locus as the likely drug target. We exploited this finding in a genomic approach to drug-target identification. Genome sequence information was used to generate molecularly tagged heterozygous yeast strains that were pooled, grown competitively in drug and analysed for drug sensitivity using high-density oligonucleotide arrays. Individual heterozygous strain analysis verified six known drug targets. Parallel analysis identified the known target and two hypersensitive loci in a mixed culture of 233 strains in the presence of the drug tunicamycin. Our discovery that both drug target and hypersensitive loci exhibit drug-induced haploinsufficiency may have important consequences in pharmacogenomics and variable drug toxicity observed in human populations.


Nature Genetics | 2002

Systematic screen for human disease genes in yeast

Lars M. Steinmetz; Curt Scharfe; Adam M. Deutschbauer; Dejana Mokranjac; Zelek S. Herman; Ted Jones; Angela M. Chu; Guri Giaever; Holger Prokisch; Peter J. Oefner; Ronald W. Davis

High similarity between yeast and human mitochondria allows functional genomic study of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to be used to identify human genes involved in disease. So far, 102 heritable disorders have been attributed to defects in a quarter of the known nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins in humans. Many mitochondrial diseases remain unexplained, however, in part because only 40–60% of the presumed 700–1,000 proteins involved in mitochondrial function and biogenesis have been identified. Here we apply a systematic functional screen using the pre-existing whole-genome pool of yeast deletion mutants to identify mitochondrial proteins. Three million measurements of strain fitness identified 466 genes whose deletions impaired mitochondrial respiration, of which 265 were new. Our approach gave higher selection than other systematic approaches, including fivefold greater selection than gene expression analysis. To apply these advantages to human disorders involving mitochondria, human orthologs were identified and linked to heritable diseases using genomic map positions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Nucleotide sequence and predicted functions of the entire Sinorhizobium meliloti pSymA megaplasmid

Melanie J. Barnett; Robert F. Fisher; Ted Jones; Caridad Komp; A. Pia Abola; Frédérique Barloy-Hubler; Leah Bowser; Delphine Capela; Francis Galibert; Jérôme Gouzy; Mani Gurjal; Andrea Hong; Lucas Huizar; Richard W. Hyman; Daniel Kahn; Michael L. Kahn; Sue Kalman; David H. Keating; Curtis Palm; Melicent C. Peck; Raymond Surzycki; Derek H. Wells; Kuo-Chen Yeh; Ronald W. Davis; Nancy A. Federspiel; Sharon R. Long

The symbiotic nitrogen-fixing soil bacterium Sinorhizobium meliloti contains three replicons: pSymA, pSymB, and the chromosome. We report here the complete 1,354,226-nt sequence of pSymA. In addition to a large fraction of the genes known to be specifically involved in symbiosis, pSymA contains genes likely to be involved in nitrogen and carbon metabolism, transport, stress, and resistance responses, and other functions that give S. meliloti an advantage in its specialized niche.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Metabolic specialization associated with phenotypic switching in Candida albicans

Chung-Yu Lan; George Newport; Luis A. Murillo; Ted Jones; Stewart Scherer; Ronald W. Davis; Nina Agabian

Phase and antigenic variation are mechanisms used by microbial pathogens to stochastically change their cell surface composition. A related property, referred to as phenotypic switching, has been described for some pathogenic fungi. This phenomenon is best studied in Candida albicans, where switch phenotypes vary in morphology, physiology, and pathogenicity in experimental models. In this study, we report an application of a custom Affymetrix GeneChip representative of the entire C. albicans genome and assay the global expression profiles of white and opaque switch phenotypes of the WO-1 strain. Of 13,025 probe sets examined, 373 ORFs demonstrated a greater than twofold difference in expression level between switch phenotypes. Among these, 221 were expressed at a level higher in opaque cells than in white cells; conversely, 152 were more highly expressed in white cells. Affected genes represent functions as diverse as metabolism, adhesion, cell surface composition, stress response, signaling, mating type, and virulence. Approximately one-third of the differences between cell types are related to metabolic pathways, opaque cells expressing a transcriptional profile consistent with oxidative metabolism and white cells expressing a fermentative one. This bias was obtained regardless of carbon source, suggesting a connection between phenotypic switching and metabolic flexibility, where metabolic specialization of switch phenotypes enhances selection in relation to the nutrients available at different anatomical sites. These results extend our understanding of strategies used in microbial phase variation and pathogenesis and further characterize the unanticipated diversity of genes expressed in phenotypic switching.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Genome sequencing and comparative analysis of Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain YJM789

Wu Wei; John H. McCusker; Richard W. Hyman; Ted Jones; Ye Ning; Zhiwei Cao; Zhenglong Gu; Dan Bruno; Molly Miranda; Michelle Nguyen; Julie Wilhelmy; Caridad Komp; Raquel Tamse; Xiaojing Wang; Peilin Jia; Philippe P. Luedi; Peter J. Oefner; Lior David; Fred S. Dietrich; Yixue Li; Ronald W. Davis; Lars M. Steinmetz

We sequenced the genome of Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain YJM789, which was derived from a yeast isolated from the lung of an AIDS patient with pneumonia. The strain is used for studies of fungal infections and quantitative genetics because of its extensive phenotypic differences to the laboratory reference strain, including growth at high temperature and deadly virulence in mouse models. Here we show that the ≈12-Mb genome of YJM789 contains ≈60,000 SNPs and ≈6,000 indels with respect to the reference S288c genome, leading to protein polymorphisms with a few known cases of phenotypic changes. Several ORFs are found to be unique to YJM789, some of which might have been acquired through horizontal transfer. Localized regions of high polymorphism density are scattered over the genome, in some cases spanning multiple ORFs and in others concentrated within single genes. The sequence of YJM789 contains clues to pathogenicity and spurs the development of more powerful approaches to dissecting the genetic basis of complex hereditary traits.


Molecular Microbiology | 2004

Regulatory networks affected by iron availability in Candida albicans

Chung-Yu Lan; Gabriel Rodarte; Luis A. Murillo; Ted Jones; Ronald W. Davis; Jan Dungan; George Newport; Nina Agabian

Iron, an essential element for almost every organism, serves as a regulatory signal for the expression of virulence determinants in many prokaryotic and eukaryotic pathogens. Using a custom Affymetrix GeneChip© representing the entire Candida albicans genome, we examined the changes in genome‐wide gene expression in this opportunistic pathogen as a function of alterations in environmental concentrations of iron. A total of 526 open reading frame (ORF) transcripts are more highly expressed when the levels of available iron are low, while 626 ORF transcripts are more highly expressed in high‐iron conditions. The transcripts dominantly affected by iron concentration range from those associated with cell‐surface properties to others which affect mitochondrial function, iron transport and virulence‐related secreted hydrolases. Moreover gene expression as assayed in DNA microarrays confirms and extends reports of alterations in cell‐surface antigens and drug sensitivity correlated with iron availability. To understand how these genes and pathways might be regulated, we isolated a gene designated SFU1 that encodes a homologue of the Ustilago maydis URBS1, a transcriptional repressor of siderophore uptake/biosynthesis. Comparisons between wild‐type and SFU1‐null mutant strains revealed 139 potential target genes of Sfu1p; many of which are iron‐responsive. Together, these results not only expand our understanding of global iron regulation in C. albicans, but also provide insights into the potential role of iron availability in C. albicans virulence.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Genomic evidence for a complete sexual cycle in Candida albicans

Keh-Weei Tzung; Roy M. Williams; Stewart Scherer; Nancy A. Federspiel; Ted Jones; Nancy F. Hansen; Vesna Bivolarevic; Lucas Huizar; Caridad Komp; Ray Surzycki; Raquel Tamse; Ronald W. Davis; Nina Agabian

Candida albicans is a diploid fungus that has become a medically important opportunistic pathogen in immunocompromised individuals. We have sequenced the C. albicans genome to 10.4-fold coverage and performed a comparative genomic analysis between C. albicans and Saccharomyces cerevisiae with the objective of assessing whether Candida possesses a genetic repertoire that could support a complete sexual cycle. Analyzing over 500 genes important for sexual differentiation in S. cerevisiae, we find many homologues of genes that are implicated in the initiation of meiosis, chromosome recombination, and the formation of synaptonemal complexes. However, others are striking in their absence. C. albicans seems to have homologues of all of the elements of a functional pheromone response pathway involved in mating in S. cerevisiae but lacks many homologues of S. cerevisiae genes for meiosis. Other meiotic gene homologues in organisms ranging from filamentous fungi to Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans were also found in the C. albicans genome, suggesting potential alternative mechanisms of genetic exchange.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

Infrequent Genetic Exchange and Recombination in the Mitochondrial Genome of Candida albicans

James B. Anderson; Claire Wickens; Mustafa Khan; Leah E. Cowen; Nancy A. Federspiel; Ted Jones; Linda M. Kohn

Previous analyses of diploid nuclear genotypes have concluded that recombination has occurred in populations of the yeast Candida albicans. To address the possibilities of clonality and recombination in an effectively haploid genome, we sequenced seven regions of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in 45 strains of C. albicans from human immunodeficiency virus-positive patients in Toronto, Canada, and 3 standard reference isolates of C. albicans, CA, CAI4, and WO-1. Among a total of 2,553 nucleotides in the seven regions, 62 polymorphic nucleotide sites and seven indels defined nine distinct mtDNA haplotypes among the 48 strains. Five of these haplotypes occurred in more than one strain, indicating clonal proliferation of mtDNA. Phylogenetic analysis of mtDNA haplotypes resulted in one most-parsimonious tree. Most of the nucleotide sites undergoing parallel change in this tree were clustered in blocks that corresponded to sequenced regions. Because of the existence of these blocks, the apparent homoplasy can be attributed to infrequent, past genetic exchange and recombination between individuals and cannot be attributed to parallel mutation. Among strains sharing the same mtDNA haplotypes, multilocus nuclear genotypes were more similar than expected from a random comparison of nuclear DNA genotypes, suggesting that clonal proliferation of the mitochondrial genome was accompanied by clonal proliferation of the nuclear genome.


Science | 1999

Functional Characterization of the S. cerevisiae Genome by Gene Deletion and Parallel Analysis

Elizabeth Winzeler; Daniel D. Shoemaker; Anna Astromoff; Hong Liang; Keith M. Anderson; Bruno André; Rhonda Bangham; Rocío Benito; Jef D. Boeke; Howard Bussey; Angela M. Chu; Carla Connelly; Karen D. Davis; Fred S. Dietrich; S W Dow; M El Bakkoury; Françoise Foury; Stephen H. Friend; E Gentalen; Guri Giaever; Johannes H. Hegemann; Ted Jones; M Laub; H Liao; N Liebundguth; David J. Lockhart; A Lucau-Danila; M Lussier; N M'Rabet; P Menard


Science | 2001

The Composite Genome of the Legume Symbiont Sinorhizobium meliloti

Francis Galibert; Turlough M. Finan; Sharon R. Long; Alfred Pühler; Pia Abola; Frédéric Ampe; Frédérique Barloy-Hubler; Melanie J. Barnett; Anke Becker; Pierre Boistard; Gordana Bothe; Marc Boutry; Leah Bowser; Jens Buhrmester; Edouard Cadieu; Delphine Capela; Patrick Chain; Alison Cowie; Ronald W. Davis; Stéphane Dréano; Nancy A. Federspiel; Robert F. Fisher; Stéphanie Gloux; Thérèse Godrie; André Goffeau; Brian Golding; Jérôme Gouzy; Mani Gurjal; Ismael Hernández-Lucas; Andrea Hong

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Nina Agabian

University of California

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George Newport

University of California

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