Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1998134 | Molecular Cell | 2006 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Many disease states result from gene overexpression, often in a specific genetic context. To explore gene overexpression phenotypes systematically, we assembled an array of 5280 yeast strains, each containing an inducible copy of an S. cerevisiae gene, covering >80% of the genome. Approximately 15% of the overexpressed genes (769) reduced growth rate. This gene set was enriched for cell cycle-regulated genes, signaling molecules, and transcription factors. Overexpression of most toxic genes resulted in phenotypes different from known deletion mutant phenotypes, suggesting that overexpression phenotypes usually reflect a specific regulatory imbalance rather than disruption of protein complex stoichiometry. Global overexpression effects were also assayed in the context of a cyclin-dependent kinase mutant (pho85Î). The resultant gene set was enriched for Pho85p targets and identified the yeast calcineurin-responsive transcription factor Crz1p as a substrate. Large-scale application of this approach should provide a strategy for identifying target molecules regulated by specific signaling pathways.
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Authors
Richelle Sopko, Dongqing Huang, Nicolle Preston, Gordon Chua, Balázs Papp, Kimberly Kafadar, Mike Snyder, Stephen G. Oliver, Martha Cyert, Timothy R. Hughes, Charles Boone, Brenda Andrews,