Increased copy number of the 5' end of the SPS2 gene inhibits sporulation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

1987 ◽  
Vol 7 (7) ◽  
pp. 2484-2490
Author(s):  
A Percival-Smith ◽  
J Segall

We found that the introduction into a yeast cell of a high-copy-number plasmid containing the 5' end of the SPS2 gene, a sporulation-specific gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, led to a reduction in the efficiency of spore formation. The plasmid pAP290, which contains the sequence from -138 to +152 of the SPS2 gene, caused a fivefold reduction in spore formation; the presence of the plasmid had no effect on transcription of the chromosomal SPS2 gene. A plasmid containing only the sequence upstream of the TATA box of the SPS2 gene (-350 to -68) was unable to inhibit the completion of sporulation, whereas the downstream sequence, from -70 to +404, although unable by itself to inhibit sporulation, could do so when provided with an upstream fragment containing the CYC1 upstream activation sequence. Deletion of 22 base pairs from pAP290, which introduced a frameshift after codon 17 of the SPS2 gene and reduced the open reading frame to 26 amino acids, generated a plasmid (pAP290 delta Pst) which could no longer inhibit sporulation. The SPS2 inserts of pAP290 and pAP290 delta Pst were found to direct equivalent levels of sporulation-specific transcription. We conclude from these results that the presence of both the SPS2 promoter (or a substitute promoter) and the initial coding sequence of the SPS2 gene is required in the high-copy-number plasmid to generate the asporogenous phenotype. We speculate that the accumulation of a protein containing the amino-terminal portion of the SPS2 gene product, synthesized from the transcripts of the truncated plasmid-borne copies of the SPS2 gene, prevents ascus formation.

1987 ◽  
Vol 7 (7) ◽  
pp. 2484-2490 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Percival-Smith ◽  
J Segall

We found that the introduction into a yeast cell of a high-copy-number plasmid containing the 5' end of the SPS2 gene, a sporulation-specific gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, led to a reduction in the efficiency of spore formation. The plasmid pAP290, which contains the sequence from -138 to +152 of the SPS2 gene, caused a fivefold reduction in spore formation; the presence of the plasmid had no effect on transcription of the chromosomal SPS2 gene. A plasmid containing only the sequence upstream of the TATA box of the SPS2 gene (-350 to -68) was unable to inhibit the completion of sporulation, whereas the downstream sequence, from -70 to +404, although unable by itself to inhibit sporulation, could do so when provided with an upstream fragment containing the CYC1 upstream activation sequence. Deletion of 22 base pairs from pAP290, which introduced a frameshift after codon 17 of the SPS2 gene and reduced the open reading frame to 26 amino acids, generated a plasmid (pAP290 delta Pst) which could no longer inhibit sporulation. The SPS2 inserts of pAP290 and pAP290 delta Pst were found to direct equivalent levels of sporulation-specific transcription. We conclude from these results that the presence of both the SPS2 promoter (or a substitute promoter) and the initial coding sequence of the SPS2 gene is required in the high-copy-number plasmid to generate the asporogenous phenotype. We speculate that the accumulation of a protein containing the amino-terminal portion of the SPS2 gene product, synthesized from the transcripts of the truncated plasmid-borne copies of the SPS2 gene, prevents ascus formation.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 3397-3404 ◽  
Author(s):  
C K Shih ◽  
J Kwong ◽  
E Montalvo ◽  
N Neff

A wild-type haploid yeast strain was transformed with a library of wild-type yeast DNA fragments ligated into a high-copy-number plasmid vector (YEp24). The pooled URA+ transformants were plated on rich medium containing a lethal concentration of trifluoperazine (TFP). Plasmids rescued into Escherichia coli from TFP-resistant yeast colonies contained overlapping DNA fragments from a unique region of yeast chromosome XVI. Deletion and disruption experiments, mini-Tn10 LUK hop analysis, and DNA sequencing defined a novel gene with significant amino acid identity to bovine and yeast vacuoletype proteolipid subunits. This is the second locus identified that can be altered to confer TFP resistance to Saccharomyces cerevisiae and that has significant amino acid identity to a vacuolar ATPase subunit. This suggests that a target for TFP in S. cerevisiae is the electrogenic membranes of the vacuolar network and that alteration of expression or activity of vacuolar proton ATPase subunits is a general mechanism for TFP resistance in this yeast.


1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 3397-3404
Author(s):  
C K Shih ◽  
J Kwong ◽  
E Montalvo ◽  
N Neff

A wild-type haploid yeast strain was transformed with a library of wild-type yeast DNA fragments ligated into a high-copy-number plasmid vector (YEp24). The pooled URA+ transformants were plated on rich medium containing a lethal concentration of trifluoperazine (TFP). Plasmids rescued into Escherichia coli from TFP-resistant yeast colonies contained overlapping DNA fragments from a unique region of yeast chromosome XVI. Deletion and disruption experiments, mini-Tn10 LUK hop analysis, and DNA sequencing defined a novel gene with significant amino acid identity to bovine and yeast vacuoletype proteolipid subunits. This is the second locus identified that can be altered to confer TFP resistance to Saccharomyces cerevisiae and that has significant amino acid identity to a vacuolar ATPase subunit. This suggests that a target for TFP in S. cerevisiae is the electrogenic membranes of the vacuolar network and that alteration of expression or activity of vacuolar proton ATPase subunits is a general mechanism for TFP resistance in this yeast.


1990 ◽  
Vol 18 (11) ◽  
pp. 3408-3408 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neil R. Hackett ◽  
Mark P. Krebs ◽  
Shiladitya DasSarma ◽  
Werner Goebel ◽  
Uttam L. RajBhandary ◽  
...  

1989 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 1488-1497 ◽  
Author(s):  
K W Runge ◽  
V A Zakian

The termini of Saccharomyces cerevisiae chromosomes consist of tracts of C1-3A (one to three cytosine and one adenine residue) sequences of approximately 450 base pairs in length. To gain insights into trans-acting factors at telomeres, high-copy-number linear and circular plasmids containing tracts of C1-3A sequences were introduced into S. cerevisiae. We devised a novel system to distinguish by color colonies that maintained the vector at 1 to 5, 20 to 50, and 100 to 400 copies per cell and used it to change the amount of telomeric DNA sequences per cell. An increase in the number of C1-3A sequences caused an increase in the length of telomeric C1-3A repeats that was proportional to plasmid copy number. Our data suggest that telomere growth is inhibited by a limiting factor(s) that specifically recognizes C1-3A sequences and that this factor can be effectively competed for by long tracts of C1-3A sequences at telomeres or on circular plasmids. Telomeres without this factor are exposed to processes that serve to lengthen chromosome ends.


Plasmid ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Umelo-Njaka ◽  
John F. Nomellini ◽  
Harry Yim ◽  
John Smit

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