A Lallzyme MMX‐based rapid method for fission yeast protoplast preparationFlor‐Parra, Ignacio; Zhurinsky, Jacob; Bernal, Manuel; Gallardo, Paola; Daga, Rafael R.
doi: 10.1002/yea.2994pmid: 24323433
Fungal cells including yeasts are surrounded by cell wall that counteracts turgor pressure and prevents cell lysis. Many yeast experiments, including genetic manipulation of sterile strains, morphogenesis studies, nucleic acid isolation and many others, require mechanical breakage or enzymatic removal of the cell wall. Some of these experiments require the generation of live cells lacking cell walls, called protoplasts, that can be maintained in osmostabilized medium. Enzymatic digestion of cell wall proteoglycans is a commonly used method of protoplast preparation. Currently existing protocols for fission yeast cell wall digestion are time consuming and not very efficient. We developed a new rapid method for fission yeast protoplast preparation that relies on digesting cell walls with Lallzyme MMX commercial enzyme mix, which produces protoplasts from all cells in less than 10 min. We demonstrate that these protoplasts can be utilized in three commonly used fission yeast protocols. Thus, we provide the fission yeast community with a robust and efficient plasmid extraction method, a new protocol for diploid generation and an assay for protoplast recovery that should be useful for studies of morphogenesis. Our method is potentially applicable to other yeasts and fungi. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Cell wall structure suitable for surface display of proteins in Saccharomyces cerevisiaeMatsuoka, Hiroyuki; Hashimoto, Kazuya; Saijo, Aki; Takada, Yuki; Kondo, Akihiko; Ueda, Mitsuyoshi; Ooshima, Hiroshi; Tachibana, Taro; Azuma, Masayuki
doi: 10.1002/yea.2995pmid: 24357429
A display system for adding new protein functions to the cell surfaces of microorganisms has been developed, and applications of the system to various fields have been proposed. With the aim of constructing a cell surface environment suitable for protein display in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the cell surface structures of cell wall mutants were investigated. Four cell wall mutant strains were selected by analyses using a GFP display system via a GPI anchor. β‐Glucosidase and endoglucanase II were displayed on the cell surface in the four mutants, and their activities were evaluated. mnn2 deletion strain exhibited the highest activity for both the enzymes. In particular, endoglucanase II activity using carboxymethylcellulose as a substrate in the mutant strain was 1.9‐fold higher than that of the wild‐type strain. In addition, the activity of endoglucanase II released from the mnn2 deletion strain by Zymolyase 20T treatment was higher than that from the wild‐type strain. The results of green fluorescent protein (GFP) and endoglucanase displays suggest that the amounts of enzyme displayed on the cell surface were increased by the mnn2 deletion. The enzyme activity of the mnn2 deletion strain was compared with that of the wild‐type strain. The relative value (mnn2 deletion mutant/wild‐type strain) of endoglucanase II activity using carboxymethylcellulose as a substrate was higher than that of β‐glucosidase activity using p‐nitrophenyl‐β‐glucopyranoside as a substrate, suggesting that the cell surface environment of the mnn2 deletion strain facilitates the binding of high‐molecular‐weight substrates to the active sites of the displayed enzymes. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Primers‐4‐Yeast: a comprehensive web tool for planning primers for Saccharomyces cerevisiaeYofe, Ido; Schuldiner, Maya
doi: 10.1002/yea.2998pmid: 24408512
The budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a key model organism of functional genomics, due to its ease and speed of genetic manipulations. In fact, in this yeast, the requirement for homologous sequences for recombination purposes is so small that 40 base pairs (bp) are sufficient. Hence, an enormous variety of genetic manipulations can be performed by simply planning primers with the correct homology, using a defined set of transformation plasmids. Although designing primers for yeast transformations and for the verification of their correct insertion is a common task in all yeast laboratories, primer planning is usually done manually and a tool that would enable easy, automated primer planning for the yeast research community is still lacking. Here we introduce Primers‐4‐Yeast, a web tool that allows primers to be designed in batches for S. cerevisiae gene‐targeting transformations, and for the validation of correct insertions. This novel tool enables fast, automated, accurate primer planning for large sets of genes, introduces consistency in primer planning and is therefore suggested to serve as a standard in yeast research. Primers‐4‐Yeast is available at: http://www.weizmann.ac.il/Primers‐4‐Yeast Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.