Advanced Protocol for Molecular Characterization of Viral Genome in Fission Yeast (Schizosaccharomyces pombe)
Jiantao Zhang, Zsigmond Benko, Chenyu Zhang, Richard Y. Zhao

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new method using fission yeast to study viral proteins and their effects on host cells, helping identify potential antiviral targets.
Contribution
A streamlined, scalable molecular cloning strategy for genome-wide functional characterization of viral proteins in fission yeast.
Findings
Fission yeast is a valuable model for studying virus–host interactions due to its conserved cellular processes.
The protocol enables rapid and comprehensive functional analysis of viral proteins with therapeutic implications.
The approach has been successfully applied to study various human and plant viruses.
Abstract
Fission yeast, a single-cell eukaryotic organism, shares many fundamental cellular processes with higher eukaryotes, including gene transcription and regulation, cell cycle regulation, vesicular transport and membrane trafficking, and cell death resulting from the cellular stress response. As a result, fission yeast has proven to be a versatile model organism for studying human physiology and diseases such as cell cycle dysregulation and cancer, as well as autophagy and neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and Huntington’s diseases. Given that viruses are obligate intracellular parasites that rely on host cellular machinery to replicate and produce, fission yeast could serve as a surrogate to identify viral proteins that affect host cellular processes. This approach could facilitate the study of virus–host interactions and help identify potential viral targets for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFungal and yeast genetics research · Plant Virus Research Studies · Biofuel production and bioconversion
