Zhaolei Zhang
University of Toronto
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Publication
Featured researches published by Zhaolei Zhang.
Nature | 1998
Zhaolei Zhang; Li-shar Huang; Vladimir M. Shulmeister; Young-In Chi; Kyeong Kyu Kim; Li-Wei Hung; Antony R. Crofts; Edward A. Berry; Sung-Hou Kim
The cytochrome bc1 is one of the three major respiratory enzyme complexes residing in the inner mitochondrial membrane. Cytochrome bc1 transfers electrons from ubiquinol to cytochrome c and uses the energy thus released to form an electrochemical gradient across the inner membrane. Our X-ray crystal structures of the complex from chicken, cow and rabbit in both the presence and absence of inhibitors of quinone oxidation, reveal two different locations for the extrinsic domain of one component of the enzyme, an iron–sulphur protein. One location is close enough to the supposed quinol oxidation site to allow reduction of the Fe–S protein by ubiquinol. The other site is close enough to cytochrome c1 to allow oxidation of the Fe–S protein by the cytochrome. As neither location will allow both reactions to proceed at a suitable rate, the reaction mechanism must involve movement of the extrinsic domain of the Fe–S component in order to shuttle electrons from ubiquinol to cytochrome c1. Such a mechanism has not previously been observed in redox protein complexes.
Nature Biotechnology | 2011
Zhijian Li; Franco J. Vizeacoumar; Sondra Bahr; Jingjing Li; Jonas Warringer; Frederick Vizeacoumar; Renqiang Min; Benjamin VanderSluis; Jeremy Bellay; Michael Devit; James A. Fleming; Andrew D. Stephens; Julian Haase; Zhen Yuan Lin; Anastasia Baryshnikova; Hong Lu; Zhun Yan; Ke Jin; Sarah L. Barker; Alessandro Datti; Guri Giaever; Corey Nislow; Chris Bulawa; Chad L. Myers; Michael Costanzo; Anne-Claude Gingras; Zhaolei Zhang; Anders Blomberg; Kerry Bloom; Brenda Andrews
Conditional temperature-sensitive (ts) mutations are valuable reagents for studying essential genes in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We constructed 787 ts strains, covering 497 (∼45%) of the 1,101 essential yeast genes, with ∼30% of the genes represented by multiple alleles. All of the alleles are integrated into their native genomic locus in the S288C common reference strain and are linked to a kanMX selectable marker, allowing further genetic manipulation by synthetic genetic array (SGA)–based, high-throughput methods. We show two such manipulations: barcoding of 440 strains, which enables chemical-genetic suppression analysis, and the construction of arrays of strains carrying different fluorescent markers of subcellular structure, which enables quantitative analysis of phenotypes using high-content screening. Quantitative analysis of a GFP-tubulin marker identified roles for cohesin and condensin genes in spindle disassembly. This mutant collection should facilitate a wide range of systematic studies aimed at understanding the functions of essential genes.
Molecular Systems Biology | 2009
Yunchen Gong; Yoshito Kakihara; Nevan J. Krogan; Jack Greenblatt; Andrew Emili; Zhaolei Zhang; Walid A. Houry
Molecular chaperones are known to be involved in many cellular functions, however, a detailed and comprehensive overview of the interactions between chaperones and their cofactors and substrates is still absent. Systematic analysis of physical TAP‐tag based protein–protein interactions of all known 63 chaperones in Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been carried out. These chaperones include seven small heat‐shock proteins, three members of the AAA+ family, eight members of the CCT/TRiC complex, six members of the prefoldin/GimC complex, 22 Hsp40s, 1 Hsp60, 14 Hsp70s, and 2 Hsp90s. Our analysis provides a clear distinction between chaperones that are functionally promiscuous and chaperones that are functionally specific. We found that a given protein can interact with up to 25 different chaperones during its lifetime in the cell. The number of interacting chaperones was found to increase with the average number of hydrophobic stretches of length between one and five in a given protein. Importantly, cellular hot spots of chaperone interactions are elucidated. Our data suggest the presence of endogenous multicomponent chaperone modules in the cell.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2005
Paul M. Harrison; Deyou Zheng; Zhaolei Zhang; Nicholas Carriero; Mark Gerstein
Pseudogenes, in the case of protein-coding genes, are gene copies that have lost the ability to code for a protein; they are typically identified through annotation of disabled, decayed or incomplete protein-coding sequences. Processed pseudogenes (PΨgs) are made through mRNA retrotransposition. There is overwhelming genomic evidence for thousands of human PΨgs and also dozens of human processed genes that comprise complete retrotransposed copies of other genes. Here, we survey for an intermediate entity, the transcribed processed pseudogene (TPΨg), which is disabled but nonetheless transcribed. TPΨgs may affect expression of paralogous genes, as observed in the case of the mouse makorin1-p1 TPΨg. To elucidate their role, we identified human TPΨgs by mapping expressed sequences onto PΨgs and, reciprocally, extracting TPΨgs from known mRNAs. We consider only those PΨgs that are homologous to either non-mammalian eukaryotic proteins or protein domains of known structure, and require detection of identical coding-sequence disablements in both the expressed and genomic sequences. Oligonucleotide microarray data provide further expression verification. Overall, we find 166–233 TPΨgs (∼4–6% of PΨgs). Proteins/transcripts with the highest numbers of homologous TPΨgs generally have many homologous PΨgs and are abundantly expressed. TPΨgs are significantly over-represented near both the 5′ and 3′ ends of genes; this suggests that TPΨgs can be formed through gene–promoter co-option, or intrusion into untranslated regions. However, roughly half of the TPΨgs are located away from genes in the intergenic DNA and thus may be co-opting cryptic promoters of undesignated origin. Furthermore, TPΨgs are unlike other PΨgs and processed genes in the following ways: (i) they do not show a significant tendency to either deposit on or originate from the X chromosome; (ii) only 5% of human TPΨgs have potential orthologs in mouse. This latter finding indicates that the vast majority of TPΨgs is lineage specific. This is likely linked to well-documented extensive lineage-specific SINE/LINE activity. The list of TPΨgs is available at: (or) .
Nucleic Acids Research | 2007
John E. Karro; Yangpan Yan; Deyou Zheng; Zhaolei Zhang; Nicholas Carriero; Philip Cayting; Paul Harrrison; Mark Gerstein
The Pseudogene.org knowledgebase serves as a comprehensive repository for pseudogene annotation. The definition of a pseudogene varies within the literature, resulting in significantly different approaches to the problem of identification. Consequently, it is difficult to maintain a consistent collection of pseudogenes in detail necessary for their effective use. Our database is designed to address this issue. It integrates a variety of heterogeneous resources and supports a subset structure that highlights specific groups of pseudogenes that are of interest to the research community. Tools are provided for the comparison of sets and the creation of layered set unions, enabling researchers to derive a current ‘consensus’ set of pseudogenes. Additional features include versatile search, the capacity for robust interaction with other databases, the ability to reconstruct older versions of the database (accounting for changing genome builds) and an underlying object-oriented interface designed for researchers with a minimal knowledge of programming. At the present time, the database contains more than 100 000 pseudogenes spanning 64 prokaryote and 11 eukaryote genomes, including a collection of human annotations compiled from 16 sources.
Journal of Biology | 2003
Zhaolei Zhang; Mark Gerstein
Phylogenetic footprinting is an approach to finding functionally important sequences in the genome that relies on detecting their high degrees of conservation across different species. A new study shows how much it improves the prediction of gene-regulatory elements in the human genome.
Genome Research | 2008
Gabriel Musso; Michael Costanzo; ManQin Huangfu; A. M. Smith; Jadine Paw; Bryan-Joseph San Luis; Charles Boone; Guri Giaever; Corey Nislow; Andrew Emili; Zhaolei Zhang
Since complete redundancy between extant duplicates (paralogs) is evolutionarily unfavorable, some degree of functional congruency is eventually lost. However, in budding yeast, experimental evidence collected for duplicated metabolic enzymes and in global physical interaction surveys had suggested widespread functional overlap between paralogs. While maintained functional overlap is thought to confer robustness against genetic mutation and facilitate environmental adaptability, it has yet to be determined what properties define paralogs that can compensate for the phenotypic consequence of deleting a sister gene, how extensive this epistasis is, and how adaptable it is toward alternate environmental states. To this end, we have performed a comprehensive experimental analysis of epistasis as indicated by aggravating genetic interactions between paralogs resulting from an ancient whole-genome duplication (WGD) event occurring in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and thus were able to compare properties of large numbers of epistatic and non-epistatic paralogs with identical evolutionary times since divergence. We found that more than one-third (140) of the 399 examinable WGD paralog pairs were epistatic under standard laboratory conditions and that additional cases of epistasis became obvious only under media conditions designed to induce cellular stress. Despite a significant increase in within-species sequence co-conservation, analysis of protein interactions revealed that paralogs epistatic under standard laboratory conditions were not more functionally overlapping than those non-epistatic. As experimental conditions had an impact on the functional categorization of paralogs deemed epistatic and only a fraction of potential stress conditions have been interrogated here, we hypothesize that many epistatic relationships remain unresolved.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2010
Franco J. Vizeacoumar; Nydia Van Dyk; Frederick Vizeacoumar; Vincent Cheung; Jingjing Li; Yaroslav Sydorskyy; Nicolle Case; Zhijian Li; Alessandro Datti; Corey Nislow; Brian Raught; Zhaolei Zhang; Brendan J. Frey; Kerry Bloom; Charles Boone; Brenda Andrews
A combination of yeast genetics, synthetic genetic array analysis, and high-throughput screening reveals that sumoylation of Mcm21p promotes disassembly of the mitotic spindle.
PLOS Computational Biology | 2009
Xingyi Guo; Zhaolei Zhang; Mark Gerstein; Deyou Zheng
Pseudogenes are significant components of eukaryotic genomes, and some have acquired novel regulatory roles. To date, no study has characterized rice pseudogenes systematically or addressed their impact on the structure and function of the rice genome. In this genome-wide study, we have identified 11,956 non-transposon-related rice pseudogenes, most of which are from gene duplications. About 12% of the rice protein-coding genes, half of which are in singleton families, have a pseudogene paralog. Interestingly, we found that 145 of these pseudogenes potentially gave rise to antisense small RNAs after examining ∼1.5 million small RNAs from developing rice grains. The majority (>50%) of these antisense RNAs are 24-nucleotides long, a feature often seen in plant repeat-associated small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) produced by RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RDR2) and Dicer-like protein 3 (DCL3), suggesting that some pseudogene-derived siRNAs may be implicated in repressing pseudogene transcription (i.e., cis-acting). Multiple lines of evidence, however, indicate that small RNAs from rice pseudogenes might also function as natural antisense siRNAs either by interacting with the complementary sense RNAs from functional parental genes (38 cases) or by forming double-strand RNAs with transcripts of adjacent paralogous pseudogenes (2 cases) (i.e., trans-acting). Further examinations of five additional small RNA libraries revealed that pseudogene-derived antisense siRNAs could be produced in specific rice developmental stages or physiological growth conditions, suggesting their potentially important roles in normal rice development. In summary, our results show that pseudogenes derived from protein-coding genes are prevalent in the rice genome, and a subset of them are strong candidates for producing small RNAs with novel regulatory roles. Our findings suggest that pseudogenes of exapted functions may be a phenomenon ubiquitous in eukaryotic organisms.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2000
Edward A. Berry; Zhaolei Zhang; Henry D. Bellamy; Li-shar Huang
The chicken mitochondrial ubiquinol cytochrome c oxidoreductase (bc(1) complex) is inhibited by Zn(2+) ions, but with higher K(i) ( approximately 3 microM) than the corresponding bovine enzyme. When equilibrated with mother liquor containing 200 microM ZnCl(2) for 7 days, the crystalline chicken bc(1) complex specifically binds Zn(2+) at 4 sites representing two sites on each monomer in the dimer. These two sites are close to the stigmatellin-binding site, taken to be center Q(o) of the Q-cycle mechanism, and are candidates for the inhibitory site. One binding site is actually in the hydrophobic channel between the Q(o) site and the bulk lipid phase, and may interfere with quinone binding. The other is in a hydrophilic area between cytochromes b and c(1), and might interfere with the egress of protons from the Q(o) site to the intermembrane aqueous medium. No zinc was bound near the putative proteolytic active site of subunits 1 and 2 (homologous to mitochondrial processing peptidase) under these conditions.