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Dive into the research topics where Zygmunt Ciesla is active.

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Featured researches published by Zygmunt Ciesla.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1997

Characterization of a novel DNA damage-inducible gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, DIN7, which is a structural homolog of the RAD2 and RAD27 DNA repair genes

P. Mieczkowski; Magdalena Fikus; Zygmunt Ciesla

Abstract A number of DNA damage-inducible genes (DIN) have been identified in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In the present study we describe isolation of a novel gene, Din7, the expression of which is induced by exposure of cells to UV light, MMS (methyl methanesulfonate) or HU (hydoxyurea). The DNA sequence of DIN7 was determined. By comparison of the predicted Din7 amino acid sequence with those in databases we found that it belongs to a family of proteins which includes S. cerevisiae Rad2 and its Schizosaccharomyces pombe and human homologs Rad13 and XPGC; S. cerevisiae Rad27 and its S. pombe homolog Rad2, and S. pombe Exo I. All these proteins are endowed with DNA nuclease activity and are known to play an important function in DNA repair. The strongest homology to Din7 was found with the Dhs1 protein of S.␣cerevisiae, the function of which is essentially unknown. The expression of the DIN7 gene was studied in detail using a DIN7-lacZ fusion integrated into a chromosome. We show that the expression level of DIN7 rises during meiosis at a time nearly coincident with commitment to recombination. No inducibility of DIN7 was found after treatment with DNA-damaging agents of cells bearing the rad53-21 mutation. Surprisingly, a high basal level of DIN7 expression was found in strains in which the DUN1 gene was inactivated by transposon insertion. We suggest that a form of Dun1 may be a negative regulator of the DIN7 gene expression.


Mutation Research | 2009

Inactivation of the 20S proteasome maturase, Ump1p, leads to the instability of mtDNA in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Ewa Malc; Piotr Dzierzbicki; Aneta Kaniak; Adrianna Skoneczna; Zygmunt Ciesla

The proteasome plays fundamental roles in the removal of oxidized proteins and in normal degradation of short-lived proteins. Increasing evidence suggests that the proteasome may be an important factor in both oxidative stress response and cellular aging. Moreover, it was recently reported that proteasome inhibition leads to mitochondrial dysfunction. In this study, we have investigated whether proteasome impairment, caused by deletion of UMP1, a gene necessary for the 20S proteasome biogenesis, may influence the stability of the yeast mitochondrial genome. Here we show that an ump1Delta mutant displays enhanced mitochondrial point mutagenesis, measured by the frequency of oligomycin-resistant (Oli(r)) and erythromycin-resistant (Ery(r)) mutants, compared to that of the isogenic wild-type strain. Deletion of UMP1 significantly increases also the frequency of respiration-defective mutants having gross rearrangements of the mitochondrial genome. We show that this mitochondrial mutator phenotype of the ump1Delta strain is considerably reduced in the presence of a plasmid encoding Msh1p, the mitochondrial homologue of the bacterial mismatch protein MutS, which was shown previously to counteract oxidative lesion-induced instability of mtDNA. In search of the mechanism underlying the decreased stability of mtDNA in the ump1Delta deletion mutant, we have determined the level of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the mutant cells and have found that they are exposed to endogenous oxidative stress. Furthermore, we show also that both cellular and intramitochondrial levels of Msh1p are significantly reduced in the mutant cells compared to the wild-type cells. We conclude, therefore, that both an increased ROS production and a markedly decreased level of Msh1p, a protein crucial for the repair of mtDNA, lead in S. cerevisiae cells with impaired proteasome activity to the increased instability of their mitochondrial genome.


DNA Repair | 2009

Msh1p counteracts oxidative lesion-induced instability of mtDNA and stimulates mitochondrial recombination in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Aneta Kaniak; Piotr Dzierzbicki; Agata T. Rogowska; Ewa Malc; Marta U. Fikus; Zygmunt Ciesla

The proximity of the mitochondrial genome to the respiratory chain, a major source of ROS (radical oxygen species), makes mtDNA more vulnerable to oxidative damage than nuclear DNA. Mitochondrial BER (base excision repair) is generally considered to be the main pathway involved in the prevention of oxidative lesion-induced mutations in mtDNA. However, we previously demonstrated that the increased frequency of mitochondrial Oli(r) mutants in an ogg1Delta strain, lacking the activity of a crucial mtBER glycosylase, is reduced in the presence of plasmids encoding Msh1p, the mitochondrial homologue of the bacterial mismatch protein MutS. This finding suggested that Msh1p might be involved in the prevention of mitochondrial mutagenesis induced by oxidative stress. Here we show that a double mutant carrying the msh1-R813W allele, encoding a variant of the protein defective in the ATP hydrolysis activity, combined with deletion of SOD2, encoding the mitochondrial superoxide dismutase, displays a synergistic effect on the frequency of Oli(r) mutants, indicating that Msh1p prevents generation of oxidative lesion-induced mitochondrial mutations. We also show that double mutants carrying the msh1-R813W allele, combined with deletion of either OGG1 or APN1, the latter resulting in deficiency of the Apn1 endonuclease, exhibit a synergistic effect on the frequency of respiration-defective mutants having gross rearrangements of the mitochondrial genome. This suggests that Msh1p, Ogg1p and Apn1p play overlapping functions in maintaining the stability of mtDNA. In addition, we demonstrate, using a novel ARG8(m) recombination assay, that a surplus of Msh1p results in enhanced mitochondrial recombination. Interestingly, the mutant forms of the protein, msh1p-R813W and msh1p-G776D, fail to stimulate recombination. We postulate that the Msh1p-enhanced homologous recombination may play an important role in the prevention of oxidative lesion-induced rearrangements of the mitochondrial genome.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 2002

A dominant mitochondrial mutator phenotype of Saccharomyces cerevisiae conferred by msh1 alleles altered in the sequence encoding the ATP-binding domain.

P. Koprowski; Marta U. Fikus; P. Mieczkowski; Zygmunt Ciesla

Abstract. In order to improve our understanding of the role of the yeast MSH1 gene in error avoidance in mitochondrial DNA, two msh1 alleles were constructed, which encode proteins with amino acid substitutions in an ATP-binding domain that is highly conserved among MutS homologs. Here, we report that moderate overexpression of the msh1-R813W or msh1-G776D allele, in strains which also carry the wild-type MSH1 allele, slightly increases the frequency of mutations conferring resistance to erythromycin (Er) and elevates the frequency of alterations within a polyGT tract present in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). This result indicates that the mutant alleles confer a dominant mitochondrial mutator phenotype and strongly suggests that the ATP-binding domain plays a crucial role in the in vivo function of Msh1p. Interestingly, we have found that overexpression of wild-type MSH1 has opposite effects on the stability of polyGT vs. polyAT tracts present in mtDNA; excess of Msh1p slightly increases the stability of polyGT tracts, whereas the stability of polyAT tracts is dramatically decreased. We show that although overexpression of msh1-R813W or msh1-G776D also results in a marked overall increase in the frequency of alterations in polyAT tracts, the spectrum of alterations differs from that found in cells overexpressing MSH1; large deletions predominate in the latter case, while 2-bp deletions are generated in cells that overproduce the mutant msh1p. This result strongly suggests that the mutations in the ATP binding domain change the specificity of the protein with respect to the recognition of potentially mutagenic structures in mtDNA.


Current Genetics | 2000

Expression of UMP1 is inducible by DNA damage and required for resistance of S. cerevisiae cells to UV light.

Piotr Mieczkowski; Wojtek Dajewski; Agnieszka Podlaska; Adrianna Skoneczna; Zygmunt Ciesla; Ewa Sledziewska-Gojska

Abstract It has recently been shown that the UMP1 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes a small, short-lived protein engaged in 20S proteasome formation. The results presented in this paper demonstrate that UMP1 expression is induced by the DNA damaging agents methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) and UV light as well as by hydroxyurea (HU), an inhibitor of DNA replication. MMS induction of UMP1 expression occurs at the transcriptional level and is independent of the activity of the regulatory checkpoint kinases encoded by MEC1, RAD53 or DUN1. It is also shown that the disruption of UMP1 causes increased sensitivity of yeast cells to killing by UV radiation, but only slight sensitivity to HU treatment, and does not cause any increase in the killing effect of MMS.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1990

Effect of enhanced synthesis of the epsilon subunit of DNA polymerase III on spontaneous and UV-induced mutagenesis of the Escherichia coli glyU gene

Zygmunt Ciesla; Piotr Jonczyk; Iwona J. Fijalkowska

SummaryWe have studied spontaneous and UV mutagenesis of the glyU gene in Escherichia coli trpA461 (GAG) strains carrying the pIP11 plasmid, in which the dnaQ gene encoding the 3′–5′ exonuclease subunit (epsilon) of DNA polymerase III is fused to the tac(trp-lac) promoter. We have used a pair of M13glyU phage in which the gene encoding the glycyl-tRNA is cloned in opposite orientations, consequently the phage present either GGG or CCC anticodon triplets for mutagenesis. The presence of IPTG, the inducer of the tac-dnaQ fusion, results in about 100-fold decrease in frequency of spontaneous Su+ (GAG) mutations arising in the CCC phage. The enhanced expression of tac-dnaQ reduces 10-fold the frequency of UV-induced Su+ (GAG) mutations in the CCC phage and nearly completely prevents generation by UV of Su+ (GAG) mutations in the GGG phage, in which UV-induced pyrimidine photoproducts can be formed only in the vicinity of the target triplet. These results suggest that both locally and regionally targeted mutagenesis is affected by overproduction of the epsilon subunit. By delayed photoreversal mutagenesis we have shown that UV-induced chromosomal mutagenesis of the umuC36 trpA461 strain harboring pIP11 is completely abolished in the presence of IPTG. This result seems to indicate that the misinocorporation step of DNA translesion synthesis is affected by excess of the epsilon subunit. Finally, we have introduced the pIP13 plasmid carrying the dnaQ gene into the recA1207 strain, which is deficient in the recombinase activity of RecA but constitutive in the protease activity. We demonstrate that the transformant shows much higher UV sensitivity than recA1207 carrying the vector plasmid pBR325, indicating that translesion synthesis significantly contributes to DNA repair capacity of cells deficient in recombination.


Mutation Research | 2012

The generation of oxidative stress-induced rearrangements in Saccharomyces cerevisiae mtDNA is dependent on the Nuc1 (EndoG/ExoG) nuclease and is enhanced by inactivation of the MRX complex

Piotr Dzierzbicki; Aneta Kaniak-Golik; Ewa P. Malc; Piotr A. Mieczkowski; Zygmunt Ciesla

Oxidative stress is known to enhance the frequency of two major types of alterations in the mitochondrial genome of Saccharomyces cerevisiae: point mutations and large deletions resulting in the generation of respiration-deficient petite rhō mutants. We investigated the effect of antimycin A, a well-known agent inducing oxidative stress, on the stability of mtDNA. We show that antimycin enhances exclusively the generation of respiration-deficient petite mutants and this is accompanied by a significant increase in the level of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and in a marked drop of cellular ATP. Whole mitochondrial genome sequencing revealed that mtDNAs of antimycin-induced petite mutants are deleted for most of the wild-type sequence and usually contain one of the active origins of mtDNA replication: ori1, ori2 ori3 or ori5. We show that the frequency of antimycin-induced rhō mutants is significantly elevated in mutants deleted either for the RAD50 or XRS2 gene, both encoding the components of the MRX complex, which is known to be involved in the repair of double strand breaks (DSBs) in DNA. Furthermore, enhanced frequency of rhō mutants in cultures of antimycin-treated cells lacking Rad50 was further increased by the simultaneous absence of the Ogg1 glycosylase, an important enzyme functioning in mtBER. We demonstrate also that rad50Δ and xrs2Δ deletion mutants display a considerable reduction in the frequency of allelic mitochondrial recombination, suggesting that it is the deficiency in homologous recombination which is responsible for enhanced rearrangements of mtDNA in antimycin-treated cells of these mutants. Finally, we show that the generation of large-scale mtDNA deletions induced by antimycin is markedly decreased in a nuc1Δ mutant lacking the activity of the Nuc1 nuclease, an ortholog of the mammalian mitochondrial nucleases EndoG and ExoG. This result indicates that the nuclease plays an important role in processing of oxidative stress-induced lesions in the mitochondrial genome.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1995

The antimutagenic effect of a truncated ? subunit of DNA polymerase III inEscherichia coli cells irradiated with UV light

Magdalena Kanabus; Adrianna Nowicka; Ewa Sledziewska-Gojska; Piotr Jonczyk; Zygmunt Ciesla

It has previously been suggested that inhibition of the proofreading 3′-5′ exonuclease activity of DNA polymerase may play an important role in generation of UV-induced mutations inEscherichia coli. Our previous work showing that overproduction of ε, the proofreading subunit of DNA polymerase III, counteracts the SOS mutagenic response ofE. coli seemed to be consistent with this hypothesis. To explore further the nature of the antimutagenic effect of ε we constructed plasmid pMK17, which encodes only two of the three highly conserved segments of ε — Exol and ExoII; the third segment, ExoIII, which is essential for 3′–5′ exonuclease activity, is deleted. We show that at 40°C, over-production of the truncated e subunit significantly delays production of M13 phage, suggesting that the protein retains its capacity to bind to DNA. On the other hand, the presence of pMK17 in atrpE65 strain growing at 40°C causes a 10-fold decrease in the frequency of UV-induced Trp+ mutations. This antimutagenic effect of the truncated s is effectively relieved by excess UmuD,C proteins. We also show that the presence of plasmid pIP21, which contains thednaQ49 allele encoding an ε subunit that is defective in proofreading activity, almost completely prevents generation of UV-induced mutations in thetrpE65 strain. We propose that the DNA binding ability of free ε, rather than its 3′–5′ exonuclease activity, affects processing of premutagenic UV-induced lesions, possibly by interfering with the interaction between the UmuC-UmuD′-RecA complex and Pol III holoenzyme. This interaction is probably a necessary condition for translesion synthesis.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1994

Different UmuC requirements for generation of different kinds of UV-induced mutations in Escherichia coli

Adrianna Nowicka; Magdalena Kanabus; Ewa Sledziewska-Gojska; Zygmunt Ciesla

An Escherichia coli strain bearing the dnaQ49 mutation, which results in a defective s subunit of DNA polymerase III, and carrying the lexA71 mutation, which causes derepression of the SOS regulon, is totally unable to maintain high-copy-number plasmids containing the umuDC operon. The strain is also unable to maintain the pAN4 plasmid containing a partial deletion of the umuD gene but retaining the wild-type umuC gene. These results suggest that a high cellular level of UmuC is exceptionally harmful to the defective DNA polymerase III of the dnaQ49 mutant. We have used this finding as a basis for selection of new plasmid umuC mutants. The properties of two such mutants, bearing the umuC61 or umuC95 mutation, are described in detail. In the umuC122:: Tn 5 strain harbouring the mutant plasmids, UV-induced mutagenesis is severely decreased compared to that observed with the parental umuDC+ plasmid. Interestingly, while the frequency of UV-induced GC → AT transitions is greatly reduced, the frequency of AT → TA transversions is not affected. Both mutant plasmids bear frameshift mutations within the same run of seven A residues present in umuC+; in umuC61 the run is shortened to six A whereas in umuC95 is lengthened to eight A. We have found in both umuC61 and umuC95 that translation is partially restored to the proper reading frame. We propose that under conditions of limiting amounts of UmuC, the protein preferentially facilitates processing of only some kinds of UV-induced lesions.


Genetics | 2000

The Product of the DNA Damage-Inducible Gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, DIN7, Specifically Functions in Mitochondria

M U Fikus; P A Mieczkowski; P. Koprowski; J Rytka; E Sledziewska-Gójska; Zygmunt Ciesla

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Piotr Dzierzbicki

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Marta U. Fikus

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Ewa Malc

Polish Academy of Sciences

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P. Koprowski

Polish Academy of Sciences

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P. Mieczkowski

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Piotr Jonczyk

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Adrianna Nowicka

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Aneta Kaniak

Polish Academy of Sciences

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