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Genome Res. 16:365-373, 2006 ©2006 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press; ISSN 1088-9051/06 $5.00 Letter Functional genomics of genes with small open reading frames (sORFs) in S. cerevisiae1 Genetics Branch, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20889, USA 2 Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, USA 3 Department of Biochemistry, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305, USA 4 National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20894, USA 5 Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA
Genes with small open reading frames (sORFs; <100 amino acids) represent an untapped source of important biology. sORFs largely escaped analysis because they were difficult to predict computationally and less likely to be targeted by genetic screens. Thus, the substantial number of sORFs and their potential importance have only recently become clear. To investigate sORF function, we undertook the first functional studies of sORFs in any system, using the model eukaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Based on independent experimental approaches and computational analyses, evidence exists for 299 sORFs in the S. cerevisiae genome, representing 5% of the annotated ORFs. We determined that a similar percentage of sORFs are annotated in other eukaryotes, including humans, and 184 of the S. cerevisiae sORFs exhibit similarity with ORFs in other organisms. To investigate sORF function, we constructed a collection of gene-deletion mutants of 140 newly identified sORFs, each of which contains a strain-specific "molecular barcode," bringing the total number of sORF deletion strains to 247. Phenotypic analyses of the new gene-deletion strains identified 22 sORFs required for haploid growth, growth at high temperature, growth in the presence of a nonfermentable carbon source, or growth in the presence of DNA damage and replication-arrest agents. We provide a collection of sORF deletion strains that can be integrated into the existing deletion collection as a resource for the yeast community for elucidating gene function. Moreover, our analyses of the S. cerevisiae sORFs establish that sORFs are conserved across eukaryotes and have important biological functions.
The initial Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome sequencing effort annotated all ORFs of at least 100 contiguous codons (including the first ATG) not contained entirely within a longer ORF (Goffeau et al. 1996
Many S. cerevisiae sORFs were discovered through expression-based analyses. Velculescu and colleagues used serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE) to identify, quantitate, and compare global gene expression patterns in S. cerevisiae (Velculescu et al. 1995
Since the SAGE study, additional studies provided expression-based evidence for sORFs. Transcripts for potential sORFs or ncRNAs from intergenic regions were detected by Northern blotting (Olivas et al. 1997
Potential sORF homologs were identified for many of the sORFs discovered in the expression-based studies, and recent comparative genomic studies have expanded the number of sORFs with potential orthologs. Conserved sORFs were reported from comparisons of the S. cerevisiae genome to partial genome sequences from 13 hemiascomycetes and the complete genome sequences from distantly and closely related fungi (Blandin et al. 2000 Based on the published literature, at least 299 genes in S. cerevisiae likely encode sORFs. We discovered that a similar percentage of sORFs are annotated in multiple eukaryotes and that many of the S. cerevisiae sORFs have potential orthologs in other eukaryotes. We constructed gene-deletion strains for 140 sORFs, bringing the total number of sORF deletion strains to 247. We analyzed these 140 new sORF deletion strains for growth phenotypes and identified sORFs that are essential for haploid growth and for growth at high temperature. We also identified sORFs required for growth under genotoxic conditions including exposure to hydroxyurea (HU), bleomycin, methyl methane sulfonate (MMS), or ultraviolet (UV) radiation. These data highlight the value of expression analyses and comparative genomics to identify sORFs and the advantages of S. cerevisiae genetics in investigating sORF function.
Evidence of S. cerevisiae sORFs The S. cerevisiae genome has 299 annotated sORFs (Saccharomyces Genome Database; http://www.yeastgenome.org/) (Fig. 1A; Supplemental Table A). By comparing the sORFs reported since the publication of the S. cerevisiae genome, we determined that the majority of sORFs (170) were discovered in the gene expression and homology studies mentioned above, while the remainder were previously reported in the literature (Fig. 1A, "129 previously known"). We analyzed the literature for reports of transcription, translation, or homology for the 170 new sORFs. Those that were reported by SAGE (Velculescu et al. 1997 -galactosidase assays used to detect integration require transcription and translation. The mass-spectrometry study also identified sORFs with evidence of translation (Oshiro et al. 2002
Many of the new sORFs were detected by more than one approach (Fig. 1B; Supplemental Table A). For example, a large number of sORFs were discovered as both transcribed and translated (43 sORFs) or transcribed and with potential orthologs (67 sORFs), while several (15 sORFs) show evidence of transcription, translation, and homology. sORFs discovered only by transcription-based assays (18 sORFs) may represent ncRNAs, rather than protein-coding genes. sORFs detected at the level of RNA and homology may also be ncRNAs rather than protein-coding genes if the homology is the result of conservation of an RNA rather than protein-coding sequence. The sORFs discovered only by homology (21 sORFs) may represent genes expressed under certain conditions not used in the gene expression studies or could represent conserved sequences such as regulatory elements that are not expressed (Cliften et al. 2003
Small proteins constitute a significant percentage of annotated proteins in eukaryotes The 299 sORFs constitute 5% of the 5865 genes annotated for S. cerevisiae in the NCBI RefSeq database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/RefSeq/) (Fig. 2; Pruitt et al. 2005 5%), including multicellular eukaryotes that have much larger genomes and a greater number of ORFs (Fig. 2). These results suggest that sORFs are not favored in single-celled eukaryotes or in those with smaller genomes and fewer genes. However, the evidence for the sORFs of S. cerevisiae comes from multiple analyses that may not have been used for all the representative eukaryotes (Fig. 2), and future experiments may reveal additional sORFs in these and other systems. Nevertheless, sORFs represent hundreds and in some cases >1000 ORFs in eukaryotes, and likely contribute significantly to the biology of eukaryotes.
sORFs are evolutionarily conserved
For our BLAST analyses, we compared the sORFs to the annotated proteins from the representative eukaryotes (Fig. 2) and to a database derived from genomic and EST sequences of these organisms, the UniGene database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=unigene) (Pontius et al. 2003
Our analysis of HomoloGene revealed additional conserved sORFs. HomoloGene is a system that automatically detects homologs among the annotated genes of several completely sequenced eukaryotic genomes including H. sapiens and M. musculus (Supplemental material). Seventy-one sORFs were found in HomoloGene clusters conserved at several taxonomic levels, and 55 of the clusters have an assignment from the Conserved Domain Database (Marchler-Bauer et al. 2005
In summary, our results, combined with previously published reports, establish that 184 of the S. cerevisiae sORFs may have potential orthologs in other organisms (Supplemental Table B), including distantly related organisms, such as humans, and 60% of these orthologs may themselves be sORFs (data not shown). Therefore, functional analysis of the S. cerevisiae sORFs has the potential to yield insight into the functions of the S. cerevisiae sORFs and those of other eukaryotes.
Generation of sORF deletion strains
Using homologous recombination, we constructed individual strains in which sequences from the start codon to the stop codon of the sORF were replaced by a kanMX cassette in a diploid strain (Methods) (Supplemental Fig. 1). Each sORF gene-deletion mutant is publicly available either as haploids (MATa and MAT
Identification of essential sORFs
Phenotypic analyses of haploid sORF deletion strains Six of the new haploid sORF deletion strains exhibit slow-growth phenotypes when grown at 30°C (Table 2), including strains deleted for YBL071W-A/KTI11 and YPL096C-A/ERI1, which are known to exhibit slow growth (Fichtner and Schaffrath 2002
We observed that three of the sORF deletion strains are temperature-sensitive (Ts) for growth at 37°C (Fig. 3A), while none of the sORF deletion strains showed a cold-sensitive growth phenotype at 11°C (data not shown). A Ts allele of the kinetochore mutant (ndc10-1) served as a control (Goh and Kilmartin 1993
We tested the sORF deletion strains for a "petite" phenotype, which refers to an inability to grow in the presence of a nonfermentable carbon source and is an attribute of several mutants including mitochondrial mutants (for review, see Chen and Clark-Walker 2000
To investigate the potential role of sORFs in response to genotoxic stress, we assayed the sORF deletion strains for sensitivity to the replication-arrest agent HU and to DNA-damaging agents bleomycin, MMS, and UV radiation. Sensitivity to these genotoxic agents can provide important clues about the roles of the genes in replication, transcription, cell-cycle progression, and chromosome segregation (Chang et al. 2002
For these studies, strains grown to logarithmic phase were serially diluted, spotted on medium containing the appropriate drug, or exposed to UV, and incubated for 23 d at 30°C. The S. cerevisiae checkpoint mutant mec1
Next, we tested bleomycin, a radiomimetic drug that leads to both single- and double-stranded DNA damage (Chen and Stubbe 2005
We also discovered a new sORF required for growth in the presence of MMS. MMS is a DNA-alkylating agent that primarily methylates DNA on N7-deoxyguanine and N3-deoxyadenine (Pegg 1984
The sORF deletion strains exhibit overlapping and distinct phenotypes
Phenotypic analyses of deletion strains for genes flanking the sORFs Six of the sORFs that exhibited phenotypes distinct from wild type when deleted (YBR058C-A/TSC3, YBR111W-A/SUS1, YDR079C-A/TFB5, YEL059C-A/SOM1, YJL062W-A, and YKL096C-B) are within 300 bp of larger ORFs. The phenotypes we observed may be due to altered expression of the neighboring ORFs caused by disruptions in their promoters or 5'- or 3'-untranslated regions rather than loss of function of the deleted sORFs. We therefore examined the phenotypes of strains with deletions of genes that are within 300 bp of the sORFs, a conservative approach, as 60% of ORFs, both large and small, are within 300 bp of another ORF. In all but two cases (YBR111W-A/SUS1, YJL062W-A), deletion of the neighboring genes did not produce the phenotypes we observed for the sorf strain (Supplemental Table C). For these two deletions strains, their phenotypes could be due to interference of expression of a neighboring ORF, loss of the sORF, or both.
We determined that the deletion strain for YGR271C-A showed slow growth, Ts, and an HU-sensitivity phenotype and that a deletion strain for YGR272C, which is 51 bp away from YGR271C-A, also exhibits such phenotypes (Fig. 5A). Sequence analysis of the genomic locus revealed that YGR271C-A is contiguous with YGR272C, forming a single ORF, consistent with the similarity of these two predicted ORFs to a single ORF (PABR143C) from Ashbya gossypii (Fig. 5B; Brachat et al. 2003
Protein expression analysis of the sORFs
Conclusions
Analysis of sORF percentage in representative eukaryotes The number of sORFs coding for proteins of 100 amino acids in length or less, annotated on the transcripts of model organisms in the NCBI RefSeq database, was determined using a query of the Entrez Protein database of the form: srcdb refseq[prop] AND homo sapiens[orgn] AND 0:100[slen]. The total number of ORFs in each set was counted using a query of the form: srcdb refseq[prop] AND homo sapiens[orgn]. The version of RefSeq used was that present in Entrez on 3/15/2005 corresponding to RefSeq release 10, available on 3/6/2005 with updates from 3/6/2005 to 3/15/2005.
Homology searches
BLAST of sORFs with annotated proteins and UniGene
Media and yeast strains
Gene-deletion strain construction and confirmation
Phenotypic analyses of sORF deletion strains
Protein expression analysis of HA-tagged ORFs
The authors thank Anand Sethuraman and Mike Cherry for help with compiling the sequences of the sORFs; Anuj Kumar for sharing unpublished data; Lucy Liu and Xiuquiong Zhou for tetrad dissections; Keith Anderson, Ana Aparicio, and Mike Jensen of the SGTC (Stanford Genome Technology Center) for assistance with the A.M.O.S. primers; and Mark Johnston for advice and support of this work. This work was supported in part by NIH grant R01-HG02432 to J.D.B. and by the Intramural Research Program of the NIH and NCI.
[Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org.] Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.4355406.
6 These authors contributed equally to this work.
7 Corresponding author.
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Received June 28, 2005; accepted in revised format October 6, 2005. This article has been cited by other articles:
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