13 results match your criteria: "Singapore. [3] Center for Environmental Health Science[Affiliation]"
Nat Commun
December 2024
Instituto de Biología Funcional y Genómica, CSIC, University of Salamanca, 37007, Salamanca, Spain.
Quiescent cells require a continuous supply of proteins to maintain protein homeostasis. In fission yeast, entry into quiescence is triggered by nitrogen stress, leading to the inactivation of TORC1 and the activation of TORC2. In this study, we demonstrate that the Greatwall-Endosulfine-PPA/B55 pathway connects the downregulation of TORC1 with the upregulation of TORC2, resulting in the activation of Elongator-dependent tRNA modifications crucial for sustaining the translation programme during entry into quiescence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
June 2024
Department of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Among dozens of microbial DNA modifications regulating gene expression and host defense, phosphorothioation (PT) is the only known backbone modification, with sulfur inserted at a non-bridging oxygen by and gene families. Here we explored the distribution of PT genes in 13,663 human gut microbiome genomes, finding that 6.3% possessed or genes predominantly in Bacillota, Bacteroidota, and Pseudomonadota.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
June 2024
Department of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Among dozens of known epigenetic marks, naturally occurring phosphorothioate (PT) DNA modifications are unique in replacing a non-bridging phosphate oxygen with redox-active sulfur and function in prokaryotic restriction-modification and transcriptional regulation. Interest in PTs has grown due to the widespread distribution of the , and genes among bacteria and archaea, as well as the discovery of PTs in 5-10% of gut microbes. Efforts to map PTs in complex microbiomes using existing next-generation and direct sequencing technologies have failed due to poor sensitivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRes Sq
December 2023
Instituto de Biología Funcional y Genómica, CSIC, University of Salamanca, 37007 Salamanca, Spain.
Quiescent cells require a continuous supply of proteins to maintain protein homeostasis. In fission yeast, entry into quiescence is triggered by nitrogen stress, leading to the inactivation of TORC1 and the activation of TORC2. Here, we report that the Greatwall-Endosulfine-PPA/B55 pathway connects the downregulation of TORC1 with the upregulation of TORC2, resulting in the activation of Elongator-dependent tRNA modifications essential for sustaining the translation programme during entry into quiescence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
November 2023
Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology, 1 CREATE Way, 138602, Singapore.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
September 2022
Department of Biological Sciences, University at Albany, Albany, NY 12222.
Cells respond to environmental stress by regulating gene expression at the level of both transcription and translation. The ∼50 modified ribonucleotides of the human epitranscriptome contribute to the latter, with mounting evidence that dynamic regulation of transfer RNA (tRNA) wobble modifications leads to selective translation of stress response proteins from codon-biased genes. Here we show that the response of human hepatocellular carcinoma cells to arsenite exposure is regulated by the availability of queuine, a micronutrient and essential precursor to the wobble modification queuosine (Q) on tRNAs reading GUN codons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomolecules
October 2020
State Key Laboratory of Microbial Metabolism, Joint International Research Laboratory of Metabolic and Developmental Sciences, and School of Life Sciences & Biotechnology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200030, China.
DNA phosphorothioate (PT) modification is a novel modification that occurs on the DNA backbone, which refers to a non-bridging phosphate oxygen replaced by sulfur. This exclusive DNA modification widely distributes in bacteria but has not been found in eukaryotes to date. PT modification renders DNA nuclease tolerance and serves as a constitute element of bacterial restriction-modification (R-M) defensive system and more biological functions are awaiting exploration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomolecules
August 2020
State Key Laboratory of Microbial Metabolism, Joint International Research Laboratory of Metabolic and Developmental Sciences, and School of Life Sciences & Biotechnology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200240, China.
The DNA phosphorothioate (PT) modification existing in many prokaryotes, including bacterial pathogens and commensals, confers multiple characteristics, including restricting gene transfer, influencing the global transcriptional response, and reducing fitness during exposure to chemical mediators of inflammation. While PT-containing bacteria have been investigated in a variety of environments, they have not been studied in the human microbiome. Here, we investigated the distribution of PT-harboring strains and verified their existence in the human microbiome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods
September 2016
State University of New York - SUNY Polytechnic Institute, College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering, Albany, NY.
The translation of mRNA in all forms of life uses a three-nucleotide codon and aminoacyl-tRNAs to synthesize a protein. There are 64 possible codons in the genetic code, with codons for the ∼20 amino acids and 3 stop codons having 1- to 6-fold degeneracy. Recent studies have shown that families of stress response transcripts, termed modification tunable transcripts (MoTTs), use distinct codon biases that match specifically modified tRNAs to regulate their translation during a stress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFEBS Lett
November 2014
Department of Biological Engineering and Center for Environmental Health Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, United States; Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology, Singapore, Singapore. Electronic address:
The regulation of gene expression in response to stress is an essential cellular protection mechanism. Recent advances in tRNA modification analysis and genome-based codon bias analytics have facilitated studies that lead to a novel model for translational control, with translation elongation dynamically regulated during stress responses. Stress-induced increases in specific anticodon wobble bases are required for the optimal translation of stress response transcripts that are significantly biased in the use of degenerate codons keyed to these modified tRNA bases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Protoc
April 2014
1] Department of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. [2] Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology, Campus for Research Excellence and Technical Enterprise (CREATE), Singapore. [3] Center for Environmental Health Science, MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Post-transcriptional modification of RNA is an important determinant of RNA quality control, translational efficiency, RNA-protein interactions and stress response. This is illustrated by the observation of toxicant-specific changes in the spectrum of tRNA modifications in a stress-response mechanism involving selective translation of codon-biased mRNA for crucial proteins. To facilitate systems-level studies of RNA modifications, we developed a liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) technique for the quantitative analysis of modified ribonucleosides in tRNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biotechnol
March 2014
Bioprocessing Technology Institute, A*STAR (Agency for Science, Technology and Research), 20 Biopolis Way, #06-01 Centros, Singapore 138668, Singapore; Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, National University of Singapore, 4 Engineering Drive 4, Singapore 117576, Singapore. Electronic address:
The mTOR pathway is a conserved master regulator of translational activity that influences the fate of industrially relevant CHO cell cultures, yet its molecular mechanisms remain unclear. Interestingly, rapamycin specific inhibition of the mTOR pathway in CHO cells was found to down-regulate the small nucleolar RNA U19 (snoRNA U19) by 2-fold via translatome profiling. snoRNA U19 guides the two most conserved pseudouridylation modifications on 28S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) that are important for the biogenesis and proper function of ribosomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Res Toxicol
March 2014
Department of Biological Engineering, Center for Environmental Health Science, Infectious Disease Interdisciplinary Research Group, Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, United States.
Cells respond to environmental stressors and xenobiotic exposures using regulatory networks to control gene expression, and there is an emerging appreciation for the role of numerous postsynthetic chemical modifications of DNA, RNA, and proteins in controlling transcription and translation of the stress response. In this Perspective, we present a model for a new network that regulates the cellular response to xenobiotic exposures and other stresses in which stress-induced reprogramming of a system of dozens of post-transcriptional modifications on tRNA (tRNA) promotes selective translation of codon-biased mRNAs for critical response proteins. As a product of novel genomic and bioanalytical technologies, this model has strong parallels with the regulatory networks of DNA methylation in epigenetics and the variety of protein secondary modifications comprising signaling pathways and the histone code.
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