TY - JOUR
T1 - Protein expression patterns of the yeast mating response
AU - Yuan, Haiyu
AU - Zhang, Rongfei
AU - Shao, Bin
AU - Wang, Xuan
AU - Ouyang, Qi
AU - Hao, Nan
AU - Luo, Chunxiong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 The Royal Society of Chemistry.
PY - 2016/6
Y1 - 2016/6
N2 - Microfluidics, in combination with time-lapse microscopy, is a transformative technology that significantly enhances our ability to monitor and probe biological processes in living cells. However, high-throughput microfluidic devices mostly require sophisticated preparatory and setup work and are thus hard to adopt by non-experts. In this work, we designed an easy-to-use microfluidic chip, which enables tracking of 48 GFP-tagged yeast strains, with each strain under two different stimulus conditions, in a single experiment. We used this technology to investigate the dynamic pattern of protein expression during the yeast mating differentiation response. High doses of pheromone induce cell cycle arrest and the shmoo morphology, whereas low doses of pheromone lead to elongation and chemotrophic growth. By systematically analyzing the protein dynamics of 156 pheromone-regulated genes, we identified groups of genes that are preferentially induced in response to low-dose pheromone (elongation during growth) or high-dose pheromone (shmoo formation and cell cycle arrest). The protein dynamics of these genes may provide insights into the mechanisms underlying the differentiation switch induced by different doses of pheromone.
AB - Microfluidics, in combination with time-lapse microscopy, is a transformative technology that significantly enhances our ability to monitor and probe biological processes in living cells. However, high-throughput microfluidic devices mostly require sophisticated preparatory and setup work and are thus hard to adopt by non-experts. In this work, we designed an easy-to-use microfluidic chip, which enables tracking of 48 GFP-tagged yeast strains, with each strain under two different stimulus conditions, in a single experiment. We used this technology to investigate the dynamic pattern of protein expression during the yeast mating differentiation response. High doses of pheromone induce cell cycle arrest and the shmoo morphology, whereas low doses of pheromone lead to elongation and chemotrophic growth. By systematically analyzing the protein dynamics of 156 pheromone-regulated genes, we identified groups of genes that are preferentially induced in response to low-dose pheromone (elongation during growth) or high-dose pheromone (shmoo formation and cell cycle arrest). The protein dynamics of these genes may provide insights into the mechanisms underlying the differentiation switch induced by different doses of pheromone.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84974846304
U2 - 10.1039/c6ib00014b
DO - 10.1039/c6ib00014b
M3 - Article
C2 - 27177258
AN - SCOPUS:84974846304
SN - 1757-9694
VL - 8
SP - 712
EP - 719
JO - Integrative Biology (United Kingdom)
JF - Integrative Biology (United Kingdom)
IS - 6
ER -