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Dive into the research topics where Xiaoxian Guo is active.

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Featured researches published by Xiaoxian Guo.


Genome Biology and Evolution | 2015

Evolution of Gene Regulation during Transcription and Translation

Zhe Wang; Xuepeng Sun; Yi Zhao; Xiaoxian Guo; Huifeng Jiang; Hongye Li; Zhenglong Gu

Understanding how gene regulation evolves is a key area in the current evolutionary field. Gene regulation occurs at various levels. Previous work on the evolution of gene regulation has largely focused on gene transcription. In this study, we used a recently developed ribosomal footprint profiling method to investigate how gene regulation evolves at both the transcription (mRNA abundance) and translation (ribosomal density) levels. By constructing a hybrid between Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Scer) and Saccharomyces bayanus (Sbay), which diverged ∼20 Ma, and quantifying transcriptome and translatome in both parental strains and their hybrid, we showed that translation is much more conserved than transcription, mostly due to the buffering effect of translational regulation for the transcriptional divergence. More conservation in translation than transcription is also confirmed by the inheritance mode of transcription and translation between two species. Furthermore, cis and trans effects are widely involved in changes at both transcription and translation levels. Finally, our results showed that genes with certain functions and sequence features might employ specific modes for evolution at these two critical levels of gene regulation. Our results demonstrated that it is essential to investigate the evolution of gene regulation at various levels from different genetic backgrounds to obtain a complete picture of its evolutionary modes in nature.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2012

Rewiring of Posttranscriptional RNA Regulons: Puf4p in Fungi as an Example

Huifeng Jiang; Xiaoxian Guo; Lin Xu; Zhenglong Gu

It has been increasingly clear that changes in gene regulation play important roles in physiological and phenotypic evolution. Rewiring gene-regulatory networks, i.e., alteration of the gene-regulation system for different biological functions, has been demonstrated in various species. Posttranscriptional regulons have prominent roles in coordinating gene expression in a variety of eukaryotes. In this study, using Puf4p in fungi as an example, we demonstrate that posttranscriptional regulatory networks can also be rewired during evolution. Although Puf4p is highly conserved in fungi, targets of the posttranscriptional regulon are functionally diverse among known fungal species. In the Saccharomycotina subdivision, target genes of Puf4p mostly conduct function in the nucleolus; however, in the Pezizomycotina subdivision, they are enriched in the mitochondria. Furthermore, we demonstrate different regulation efficiencies of mitochondrial function by PUF proteins in different fungal clades. Our results indicate that rewiring of posttranscription regulatory networks may be an important way of generating genetic novelties in gene regulation during evolution.


Fems Yeast Research | 2014

Genome structure and dynamics of the yeast pathogen Candida glabrata

Khadija Mohamed Ahmad; Janez Kokosar; Xiaoxian Guo; Zhenglong Gu; Olena P. Ishchuk; Jure Piškur

The yeast pathogen Candida glabrata is the second most frequent cause of Candida infections. However, from the phylogenetic point of view, C. glabrata is much closer to Saccharomyces cerevisiae than to Candida albicans. Apparently, this yeast has relatively recently changed its life style and become a successful opportunistic pathogen. Recently, several C. glabrata sister species, among them clinical and environmental isolates, have had their genomes characterized. Also, hundreds of C. glabrata clinical isolates have been characterized for their genomes. These isolates display enormous genomic plasticity. The number and size of chromosomes vary drastically, as well as intra- and interchromosomal segmental duplications occur frequently. The observed genome alterations could affect phenotypic properties and thus help to adapt to the highly variable and harsh habitats this yeast finds in different human patients and their tissues. Further genome sequencing of pathogenic isolates will provide a valuable tool to understand the mechanisms behind genome dynamics and help to elucidate the genes contributing to the virulence potential.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Antagonistic Changes in Sensitivity to Antifungal Drugs by Mutations of an Important ABC Transporter Gene in a Fungal Pathogen

Wenjun Guan; Huifeng Jiang; Xiaoxian Guo; Eugenio Mancera; Lin Xu; Yu-Dong Li; Lars M. Steinmetz; Yong-Quan Li; Zhenglong Gu

Fungal pathogens can be lethal, especially among immunocompromised populations, such as patients with AIDS and recipients of tissue transplantation or chemotherapy. Prolonged usage of antifungal reagents can lead to drug resistance and treatment failure. Understanding mechanisms that underlie drug resistance by pathogenic microorganisms is thus vital for dealing with this emerging issue. In this study, we show that dramatic sequence changes in PDR5, an ABC (ATP-binding cassette) efflux transporter protein gene in an opportunistic fungal pathogen, caused the organism to become hypersensitive to azole, a widely used antifungal drug. Surprisingly, the same mutations conferred growth advantages to the organism on polyenes, which are also commonly used antimycotics. Our results indicate that Pdr5p might be important for ergosterol homeostasis. The observed remarkable sequence divergence in the PDR5 gene in yeast strain YJM789 may represent an interesting case of adaptive loss of gene function with significant clinical implications.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Coordinated Evolution of Transcriptional and Post-Transcriptional Regulation for Mitochondrial Functions in Yeast Strains

Xuepeng Sun; Zhe Wang; Xiaoxian Guo; Hongye Li; Zhenglong Gu

Evolution of gene regulation has been proposed to play an important role in environmental adaptation. Exploring mechanisms underlying coordinated evolutionary changes at various levels of gene regulation could shed new light on how organism adapt in nature. In this study, we focused on regulatory differences between a laboratory Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain BY4742 and a pathogenic S. cerevisiae strain, YJM789. The two strains diverge in many features, including growth rate, morphology, high temperature tolerance, and pathogenicity. Our RNA-Seq and ribosomal footprint profiling data showed that gene expression differences are pervasive, and genes functioning in mitochondria are mostly divergent between the two strains at both transcriptional and translational levels. Combining functional genomics data from other yeast strains, we further demonstrated that significant divergence of expression for genes functioning in the electron transport chain (ETC) was likely caused by differential expression of a transcriptional factor, HAP4, and that post-transcriptional regulation mediated by an RNA-binding protein, PUF3, likely led to expression divergence for genes involved in mitochondrial translation. We also explored mito-nuclear interactions via mitochondrial DNA replacement between strains. Although the two mitochondrial genomes harbor substantial sequence divergence, neither growth nor gene expression were affected by mitochondrial DNA replacement in both fermentative and respiratory growth media, indicating compatible mitochondrial and nuclear genomes between these two strains in the tested conditions. Collectively, we used mitochondrial functions as an example to demonstrate for the first time that evolution at both transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels could lead to coordinated regulatory changes underlying strain specific functional variations.


PLOS ONE | 2012

A Mutation in Intracellular Loop 4 Affects the Drug-Efflux Activity of the Yeast Multidrug Resistance ABC Transporter Pdr5p

Xiaoxian Guo; Jingkai Li; Tanjun Wang; Zhenhua Liu; Xin Chen; Yu-Dong Li; Zhenglong Gu; Xu-Ming Mao; Wenjun Guan; Yong-Quan Li

Multidrug resistance protein Pdr5p is a yeast ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter in the plasma membrane. It confers multidrug resistance by active efflux of intracellular drugs. However, the highly polymorphic Pdr5p from clinical strain YJM789 loses its ability to expel azole and cyclohexmide. To investigate the role of amino acid changes in this functional change, PDR5 chimeras were constructed by segmental replacement of homologous BY4741 PDR5 fragments. Functions of PDR5 chimeras were evaluated by fluconazole and cycloheximide resistance assays. Their expression, ATPase activity, and efflux efficiency for other substrates were also analyzed. Using multiple lines of evidence, we show that an alanine-to-methionine mutation at position 1352 located in the predicted short intracellular loop 4 significantly contributes to the observed transport deficiency. The degree of impairment is likely correlated to the size of the mutant residue.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Very Short Mitochondrial DNA Fragments and Heteroplasmy in Human Plasma.

Ruoyu Zhang; Kiichi Nakahira; Xiaoxian Guo; Augustine M. K. Choi; Zhenglong Gu

Cell free DNA (cfDNA) has received increasing attention and has been studied in a broad range of clinical conditions. However, few studies have focused on mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in the cell free form. We optimized DNA isolation and sequencing library preparation protocols to better retain short DNA fragments from plasma, and applied these optimized methods to plasma samples from patients with sepsis. Our methods can retain substantially shorter DNA, resulting in an average of 11.5 fold increase in short DNA fragments yield (DNA <100bp). We report that cf-mtDNA in plasma is highly enriched in short-size cfDNA (30~60 bp). Motivated by this unique size distribution, we size-selected short cfDNA, which further increased the mtDNA recovery rate by an average of 10.4 fold. We then detected mtDNA heteroplasmy in plasma from 3 patients. In one patient who previously received bone marrow transplantation, different minor allele frequencies were observed between plasma and leukocytes at heteroplasmic sites, consistent with mixed-tissue origin for cfDNA. For the other two patients, the heteroplasmy pattern is also different between plasma and leukocyte. Our study shed new lights into the architecture of the cfDNA, and mtDNA heteroplasmy identified in plasma provides new potential for biomarker discovery.


Prostaglandins Leukotrienes and Essential Fatty Acids | 2018

A novel FADS2 isoform identified in human milk fat globule suppresses FADS2 mediated Δ6-desaturation of omega-3 fatty acids

Kumar S.D. Kothapalli; Hui Gyu Park; Xiaoxian Guo; Xuepeng Sun; James Zou; Stephanie S. Hyon; Xia Qin; Peter Lawrence; Rinat Ran-Ressler; Ji Yao Zhang; Zhenglong Gu; J. Thomas Brenna

INTRODUCTION The only known non-pharmacological means to alter long chain polyunsaturated fatty acid (LCPUFA) abundance in mammalian tissue is by altering substrate fatty acid ratios. Alternative mRNA splicing is increasingly recognized as a modulator of protein structure and function. Here we report identification of a novel alternative transcript (AT) of fatty acid desaturase 2 (FADS2) that inhibits production of omega-3 but not omega-6 LCPUFA, discovered during study of ATs in human milk fat globules (MFG). METHODS Human breastmilk collected from a single donor was used to isolate MFG. An mRNA-sequencing library was constructed from the total RNA isolated from the MFG. The constructed library was sequenced using an Illumina HiSeq instrument operating in high output mode. Expression levels of evolutionary conserved FADSAT were measured using cDNA from MFG by semi-quantitative RT-PCR assay. RESULTS RNA sequencing revealed >15,000 transcripts, including moderate expression of the FADS2 classical transcript (CS). A novel FADS2 alternative transcript (FADS2AT2) with 386 amino acids was discovered. When FADS2AT2 was transiently transfected into MCF7 cells stably expressing FADS2, delta-6 desaturation (D6D) of alpha-linolenic acid 18:3n-3 → 18:4n-3 was suppressed as were downstream products 20:4n-3 and 20:5n-3. In contrast, no significant effect on D6D of linoleic acid 18:2n-6 → 18:3n-6 or downstream products was observed. FADS2, FADS2AT1 and 5 out of 8 known FADS3AT were expressed in MFG. FADS1, FADS3AT3, and FADS3AT5 are undetectable. CONCLUSION The novel, noncatalytic FADS2AT2 regulates FADS2CS-mediated Δ6-desaturation of omega-3 but not omega-6 PUFA biosynthesis. This spliced isoform mediated interaction is the first molecular mechanism by which desaturation of one PUFA family but not the other is modulated.


Current Genetics | 2018

Novel insights into global translational regulation through Pumilio family RNA-binding protein Puf3p revealed by ribosomal profiling

Zhe Wang; Xuepeng Sun; Josephine Wee; Xiaoxian Guo; Zhenglong Gu

RNA binding proteins (RBPs) can regulate the stability, localization, and translation of their target mRNAs. Among them, Puf3p is a well-known Pumilio family RBP whose biology has been intensively studied. Nevertheless, the impact of Puf3p on the translational regulation of its downstream genes still remains to be investigated at the genome-wide level. In this study, we combined ribosome profiling and RNA-Seq in budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) to investigate Puf3p’s functions in translational regulation. Comparison of translational efficiency (TE) between wild-type and puf3Δ strains demonstrates extensive translational modulation in the absence of Puf3p (over 27% genes are affected at the genome level). Besides confirming its known role in regulating mitochondrial metabolism, our data demonstrate that Puf3p serves as a key post-transcriptional regulator of downstream RBPs by regulating their translational efficiencies, indicating a network of interactions among RBPs at the post-transcriptional level. Furthermore, Puf3p switches the balance of translational flux between mitochondrial and cytosolic ribosome biogenesis to adapt to changes in cellular metabolism. In summary, our results indicate that TE can be utilized as an informative index to interrogate the mechanism underlying RBP functions, and provide novel insights into Puf3p’s mode-of-action.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2017

Parallel Evolution of Chromatin Structure Underlying Metabolic Adaptation

Jian Cheng; Xiaoxian Guo; Pengli Cai; Xiaozhi Cheng; Jure Piškur; Yanhe Ma; Huifeng Jiang; Zhenglong Gu

Parallel evolution occurs when a similar trait emerges in independent evolutionary lineages. Although changes in protein coding and gene transcription have been investigated as underlying mechanisms for parallel evolution, parallel changes in chromatin structure have never been reported. Here, Saccharomyces cerevisiae and a distantly related yeast species, Dekkera bruxellensis, are investigated because both species have independently evolved the capacity of aerobic fermentation. By profiling and comparing genome sequences, transcriptomic landscapes, and chromatin structures, we revealed that parallel changes in nucleosome occupancy in the promoter regions of mitochondria-localized genes led to concerted suppression of mitochondrial functions by glucose, which can explain the metabolic convergence in these two independent yeast species. Further investigation indicated that similar mutational processes in the promoter regions of these genes in the two independent evolutionary lineages underlay the parallel changes in chromatin structure. Our results indicate that, despite several hundred million years of separation, parallel changes in chromatin structure, can be an important adaptation mechanism for different organisms. Due to the important role of chromatin structure changes in regulating gene expression and organism phenotypes, the novel mechanism revealed in this study could be a general phenomenon contributing to parallel adaptation in nature.

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Xuepeng Sun

Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research

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