scholarly journals Saccharomyces cerevisiae cdc15 mutants arrested at a late stage in anaphase are rescued by Xenopus cDNAs encoding N-ras or a protein with beta-transducin repeats.

1993 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 4953-4966 ◽  
Author(s):  
W Spevak ◽  
B D Keiper ◽  
C Stratowa ◽  
M J Castañón

We have constructed a Xenopus oocyte cDNA library in a Saccharomyces cerevisiae expression vector and used this library to isolate genes that can function in yeast cells to suppress the temperature sensitive [corrected] defect of the cdc15 mutation. Two maternally expressed Xenopus cDNAs which fulfill these conditions have been isolated. One of these clones encodes Xenopus N-ras. In contrast to the yeast RAS genes, Xenopus N-ras rescues the cdc15 mutation. Moreover, overexpression of Xenopus N-ras in S. cerevisiae does not activate the RAS-cyclic AMP (cAMP) pathway; rather, it results in decreased levels of intracellular cAMP in both mutant cdc15 and wild-type cells. Furthermore, we show that lowering cAMP levels is sufficient to allow cells with a nonfunctional Cdc15 protein to complete the mitotic cycle. These results suggest that a key step of the cell cycle is dependent upon a phosphorylation event catalyzed by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The second clone, beta TrCP (beta-transducin repeat-containing protein), encodes a protein of 518 amino acids that shows significant homology to the beta subunits of G proteins in its C-terminal half. In this region, beta Trcp is composed of seven beta-transducin repeats. beta TrCP is not a functional homolog of S. cerevisiae CDC20, a cell cycle gene that also contains beta-transducin repeats and suppresses the cdc15 mutation.

1993 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 4953-4966
Author(s):  
W Spevak ◽  
B D Keiper ◽  
C Stratowa ◽  
M J Castañón

We have constructed a Xenopus oocyte cDNA library in a Saccharomyces cerevisiae expression vector and used this library to isolate genes that can function in yeast cells to suppress the temperature sensitive [corrected] defect of the cdc15 mutation. Two maternally expressed Xenopus cDNAs which fulfill these conditions have been isolated. One of these clones encodes Xenopus N-ras. In contrast to the yeast RAS genes, Xenopus N-ras rescues the cdc15 mutation. Moreover, overexpression of Xenopus N-ras in S. cerevisiae does not activate the RAS-cyclic AMP (cAMP) pathway; rather, it results in decreased levels of intracellular cAMP in both mutant cdc15 and wild-type cells. Furthermore, we show that lowering cAMP levels is sufficient to allow cells with a nonfunctional Cdc15 protein to complete the mitotic cycle. These results suggest that a key step of the cell cycle is dependent upon a phosphorylation event catalyzed by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The second clone, beta TrCP (beta-transducin repeat-containing protein), encodes a protein of 518 amino acids that shows significant homology to the beta subunits of G proteins in its C-terminal half. In this region, beta Trcp is composed of seven beta-transducin repeats. beta TrCP is not a functional homolog of S. cerevisiae CDC20, a cell cycle gene that also contains beta-transducin repeats and suppresses the cdc15 mutation.


2004 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 837-845 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shinichiro Enomoto ◽  
Lynn Glowczewski ◽  
Jodi Lew-Smith ◽  
Judith G. Berman

ABSTRACT Cells lacking telomerase undergo senescence, a progressive reduction in cell division that involves a cell cycle delay and culminates in “crisis,” a period when most cells become inviable. In telomerase-deficient Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells lacking components of the nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD) pathway (Upf1,Upf2, or Upf3 proteins), senescence is delayed, with crisis occurring ∼10 to 25 population doublings later than in Upf+ cells. Delayed senescence is seen in upfΔ cells lacking the telomerase holoenzyme components Est2p and TLC1 RNA, as well as in cells lacking the telomerase regulators Est1p and Est3p. The delay of senescence in upfΔ cells is not due to an increased rate of survivor formation. Rather, it is caused by alterations in the telomere cap, composed of Cdc13p, Stn1p, and Ten1p. In upfΔ mutants, STN1 and TEN1 levels are increased. Increasing the levels of Stn1p and Ten1p in Upf+ cells is sufficient to delay senescence. In addition, cdc13-2 mutants exhibit delayed senescence rates similar to those of upfΔ cells. Thus, changes in the telomere cap structure are sufficient to affect the rate of senescence in the absence of telomerase. Furthermore, the NMD pathway affects the rate of senescence in telomerase-deficient cells by altering the stoichiometry of telomere cap components.


2003 ◽  
Vol 370 (1) ◽  
pp. 265-273 ◽  
Author(s):  
Po-Yuan KE ◽  
Che-Chuan YANG ◽  
I-Chun TSAI ◽  
Zee-Fen CHANG

The expression level of human thymidine kinase (hTK) is regulated in a cell-cycle-dependent manner. One of the mechanisms responsible for the fluctuation of TK expression in the cell cycle can be attributed to protein degradation during mitosis. Given the facts that cell-cycle-dependent proteolysis is highly conserved in all eukaryotes and yeast cells are an excellent model system for protein-degradation study, here we report on the use of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Schizosaccharomyces pombe to investigate the degradation signal and mechanism required for hTK degradation. We found that the stability of hTK is significantly reduced in mitotic yeasts. Previously, we have observed that Ser-13 is the site of mitotic phosphorylation of hTK in HeLa cells [Chang, Huang and Chi (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 12095—12100]. Here, we further provide evidence that the replacement of Ser-13 by Ala (S13A) renders hTK stable in S. pombe and S. cerevisiae. Most interestingly, we demonstrated that degradation of hTK is impaired in S. cerevisiae carrying a temperature-sensitive mutation in the proteasomal gene pre1-1 or the Skp1-Cullin-1/CDC53-F-box (SCF) complex gene cdc34 or cdc53, suggesting the contribution of the SCF-mediated pathway in hTK degradation. As phosphorylation is a prerequisite signal for SCF recognition, our results implied that phosphorylation of Ser-13 probably contributes to the degradation signal for hTK via the SCF-mediated proteolytic pathway.


1992 ◽  
Vol 118 (3) ◽  
pp. 619-629 ◽  
Author(s):  
S E Brockerhoff ◽  
T N Davis

Calmodulin was localized in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by indirect immunofluorescence using affinity-purified polyclonal antibodies. Calmodulin displays an asymmetric distribution that changes during the cell cycle. In unbudded cells, calmodulin concentrates at the presumptive site of bud formation approximately 10 min before bud emergence. In small budded cells, calmodulin accumulates throughout the bud. As the bud grows, calmodulin concentrates at the tip, then disperses, and finally concentrates in the neck region before cytokinesis. An identical staining pattern is observed when wild-type calmodulin is replaced with mutant forms of calmodulin impaired in binding Ca2+. Thus, the localization of calmodulin does not depend on its ability to bind Ca2+ with a high affinity. Double labeling of yeast cells with affinity-purified anti-calmodulin antibody and rhodamine-conjugated phalloidin indicates that calmodulin and actin concentrate in overlapping regions during the cell cycle. Furthermore, disrupting calmodulin function using a temperature-sensitive calmodulin mutant delocalizes actin, and act1-4 mutants contain a random calmodulin distribution. Thus, calmodulin and actin distributions are interdependent. Finally, calmodulin localizes to the shmoo tip in cells treated with alpha-factor. This distribution, at sites of cell growth, implicates calmodulin in polarized cell growth in yeast.


Genetics ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 154 (4) ◽  
pp. 1561-1576
Author(s):  
Neil Macpherson ◽  
Vivien Measday ◽  
Lynda Moore ◽  
Brenda Andrews

Abstract In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the Swi6 protein is a component of two transcription factors, SBF and MBF, that promote expression of a large group of genes in the late G1 phase of the cell cycle. Although SBF is required for cell viability, SWI6 is not an essential gene. We performed a synthetic lethal screen to identify genes required for viability in the absence of SWI6 and identified 10 complementation groups of swi6-dependent lethal mutants, designated SLM1 through SLM10. We were most interested in mutants showing a cell cycle arrest phenotype; both slm7-1 swi6Δ and slm8-1 swi6Δ double mutants accumulated as large, unbudded cells with increased 1N DNA content and showed a temperature-sensitive growth arrest in the presence of Swi6. Analysis of the transcript levels of cell cycle-regulated genes in slm7-1 SWI6 mutant strains at the permissive temperature revealed defects in regulation of a subset of cyclin-encoding genes. Complementation and allelism tests showed that SLM7 is allelic with the TAF17 gene, which encodes a histone-like component of the general transcription factor TFIID and the SAGA histone acetyltransferase complex. Sequencing showed that the slm7-1 allele of TAF17 is predicted to encode a version of Taf17 that is truncated within a highly conserved region. The cell cycle and transcriptional defects caused by taf17slm7-1 are consistent with the role of TAFIIs as modulators of transcriptional activation and may reflect a role for TAF17 in regulating activation by SBF and MBF.


1986 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. 1590-1598
Author(s):  
M Patterson ◽  
R A Sclafani ◽  
W L Fangman ◽  
J Rosamond

The product of the CDC7 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae appears to have multiple roles in cellular physiology. It is required for the initiation of mitotic DNA synthesis. While it is not required for the initiation of meiotic DNA replication, it is necessary for genetic recombination during meiosis and for the formation of ascospores. It has also been implicated in an error-prone DNA repair pathway. Plasmids capable of complementing temperature-sensitive cdc7 mutations were isolated from libraries of yeast genomic DNA in the multicopy plasmid vectors YRp7 and YEp24. The complementing activity was localized within a 3.0-kilobase genomic DNA fragment. Genetic studies that included integration of the genomic insert at or near the CDC7 locus and marker rescue of four cdc7 alleles proved that the cloned fragment contains the yeast chromosomal CDC7 gene. The RNA transcript of CDC7 is about 1,700 nucleotides. Analysis of the nucleotide sequence of a 2.1-kilobase region of the cloned fragment revealed the presence of an open reading frame of 1,521 nucleotides that is presumed to encode the CDC7 protein. Depending on which of two possible ATG codons initiates translation, the calculated size of the CDC7 protein is 58.2 or 56 kilodaltons. Comparison of the predicted amino acid sequence of the CDC7 gene product with other known protein sequences suggests that CDC7 encodes a protein kinase.


1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (11) ◽  
pp. 4685-4691
Author(s):  
J K Mayo ◽  
K E Sampson ◽  
L D Adams ◽  
E R Crumm ◽  
S L Kelly ◽  
...  

We transfected Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells with a cloned v-mos gene (pHT25). The mos family of oncogenes has previously been shown to have serine-threonine kinase activity. This kinase activity may be required for oncogenic transformation, although its exact biological role is unknown. We found that the transfected cells had an altered morphology, a slower doubling time, and an apparent increase in the amount of a 25-kilodalton (kDa) phosphoprotein that appeared to be of low abundance. Transfection of CHO cells with a cloned temperature-sensitive mos gene (ts159) led to isolation of a cell line that showed the presence of the 25-kDa phosphoprotein at the permissive but not at the nonpermissive temperature, suggesting a direct relationship between mos activity and the presence of this phosphoprotein. The characteristics of altered morphology and depressed growth rate were reminiscent of changes seen after the activation of the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) in CHO cells. However, PKA activation did not stimulate phosphorylation of this 25-kDa protein, nor was there a change in total PKA activity in these cells. We suggest that the increased presence of the 25-kDa phosphoprotein is a consequence of the v-mos transfection and that it may be involved in the change of morphology and growth rate seen in the CHO cells. Phosphorylation of this protein may be a useful marker of mos and have some functional importance in the transformation of cells by the v-mos oncogene.


1992 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 4084-4092
Author(s):  
P C McCabe ◽  
H Haubruck ◽  
P Polakis ◽  
F McCormick ◽  
M A Innis

The rap1A gene encodes a 21-kDa, ras-related GTP-binding protein (p21rap1A) of unknown function. A close structural homolog of p21rap1A (65% identity in the amino-terminal two-thirds) is the RSR1 gene product (Rsr1p) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Although Rsr1p is not essential for growth, its presence is required for nonrandom selection of bud sites. To assess the similarity of these proteins at the functional level, wild-type and mutant forms of p21rap1A were tested for complementation of activities known to be fulfilled by Rsr1p. Expression of p21rap1A, like multicopy expression of RSR1, suppressed the conditional lethality of a temperature-sensitive cdc24 mutation. Point mutations predicted to affect the localization of p21rap1A or its ability to cycle between GDP and GTP-bound states disrupted suppression of cdc24ts, while other mutations in the 61-65 loop region improved suppression. Expression of p21rap1A could not, however, suppress the random budding phenotype of rsr1 cells. p21rap1A also apparently interfered with the normal activity of Rsrlp, causing random budding in diploid wild-type cells, suggesting an inability of p21rap1A to interact appropriately with Rsr1p regulatory proteins. Consistent with this hypothesis, we found an Rsr1p-specific GTPase-activating protein (GAP) activity in yeast membranes which was not active toward p21rap1A, indicating that p21rap1A may be predominantly GTP bound in yeast cells. Coexpression of human Rap1-specific GAP suppressed the random budding due to expression of p21rap1A or its derivatives, including Rap1AVal-12. Although Rap1-specific GAP stimulated the GTPase of Rsr1p in vitro, it did not dominantly interfere with Rsr1p function in vivo. A chimera consisting of Rap1A1-165::Rsr1p166-272 did not exhibit normal Rsr1p function in the budding pathway. These results indicated that p21rap1A and Rsr1p share at least partial functional homology, which may have implications for p21rap1A function in mammalian cells.


1993 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 3076-3083
Author(s):  
K Irie ◽  
M Takase ◽  
K S Lee ◽  
D E Levin ◽  
H Araki ◽  
...  

The PKC1 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes a homolog of mammalian protein kinase C that is required for normal growth and division of yeast cells. We report here the isolation of the yeast MKK1 and MKK2 (for mitogen-activated protein [MAP] kinase-kinase) genes which, when overexpressed, suppress the cell lysis defect of a temperature-sensitive pkc1 mutant. The MKK genes encode protein kinases most similar to the STE7 product of S. cerevisiae, the byr1 product of Schizosaccharomyces pombe, and vertebrate MAP kinase-kinases. Deletion of either MKK gene alone did not cause any apparent phenotypic defects, but deletion of both MKK1 and MKK2 resulted in a temperature-sensitive cell lysis defect that was suppressed by osmotic stabilizers. This phenotypic defect is similar to that associated with deletion of the BCK1 gene, which is thought to function in the pathway mediated by PCK1. The BCK1 gene also encodes a predicted protein kinase. Overexpression of MKK1 suppressed the growth defect caused by deletion of BCK1, whereas an activated allele of BCK1 (BCK1-20) did not suppress the defect of the mkk1 mkk2 double disruption. Furthermore, overexpression of MPK1, which encodes a protein kinase closely related to vertebrate MAP kinases, suppressed the defect of the mkk1 mkk2 double mutant. These results suggest that MKK1 and MKK2 function in a signal transduction pathway involving the protein kinases encoded by PKC1, BCK1, and MPK1. Genetic epistasis experiments indicated that the site of action for MKK1 and MKK2 is between BCK1 and MPK1.


1991 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 5710-5717
Author(s):  
E A Malone ◽  
C D Clark ◽  
A Chiang ◽  
F Winston

SPT16 was previously identified as a high-copy-number suppressor of delta insertion mutations in the 5' regions of the HIS4 and LYS2 genes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We have constructed null mutations in the SPT16 gene and have demonstrated that it is essential for growth. Temperature-sensitive-lethality spt16 alleles have been isolated and shown to be pleiotropic; at a temperature permissive for growth, spt16 mutations suppress delta insertion mutations, a deletion of the SUC2 upstream activating sequence, and mutations in trans-acting genes required for both SUC2 and Ty expression. In addition, SPT16 is identical to CDC68, a gene previously shown to be required for passage through the cell cycle control point START. However, at least some transcriptional effects caused by spt16 mutations are independent of arrest at START. These results and those in the accompanying paper (A. Rowley, R. A. Singer, and G. C. Johnston, Mol. Cell. Biol. 11:5718-5726, 1991) indicate that SPT16/CDC68 is required for normal transcription of many loci in S. cerevisiae.


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