Browsing by Author "Franken, Jaco (Cornelius Jacobus)"
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- ItemMss11p mediated regulation of transcription, pseudohyphal differentiation and flocculation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae(Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2004-03) Franken, Jaco (Cornelius Jacobus); Bauer, Florian; Pretorius, I. S.; Patterton, H. G.; Stellenbosch University. Faculty of AgriSciences. Dept. of Viticulture and Oenology. Institute for Wine Biotechnology.ENGLISH ABSTRACT: In all cellular systems the ability to alter eellular programs in response to extracellular cues is essential for survival. This involves the integration of signals triggered by membrane bound receptors in order to adjust the expression of target genes and enzyme activities and consequently phenotypic outcome. The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has evolved several adaptations, such as, sporulation and pseudohyphal differentiation, in order to survive changes in the surrounding environment. Pseudohyphal differentiation and the related phenotype, invasive growth, are proposed to be adaptations that enable the yeast to forage for scarce nutrients or escape from a detrimental environment. This dimorphic transition is associated with a change from the normal "yeast" form to a pseudohyphal form, which involves changes in budding pattern, cell-cycle progression, cellular elongation, and cell-eell and cell-substrate adherence. The outcome of these changes is elongated eells, which bud in a unipolar fashion and do not separate after budding to form chains of cells referred to as pseudohyphae. These pseudohyphae are able to penetrate the surface of agar containing growth medium, a process referred to as invasive growth. Nutrient-induced adaptations, such as pseudohyphal growth, have been extensively studied in S. cere visiae , and several factors have been implicated in the regulation thereof, many of which are part of specific signalling pathways. The most clearly defined are the filamentous growth specific MAP kinase cascade and the Gpa2p-cAMP-PKA pathway. MUC1/FL011, encoding a member of a family of cell wall associated proteins involved in cellcell/ cell-substrate adhesion, is regulated by these pathways and considered to be critical in the establishment of pseudohyphal differentiation and invasive growth. The promoter region of MUC1/FL011 represents one of the largest yeast promoters identified to date, with cis-acting elements present up to 2.4 kb upstream from the first coding triplet. The upstream regulatory region of MUC1/FL011 is almost identical to that of the STA2 gene, which encodes an extracellular glucoamylase required for the utilisation of extracellular starch. As suggested by the extent of homology between these two promoters, MUC1/FL011 and STA2 are co-regulated to a large degree and both require the same transcription factors. Mss11p plays a central role in the regulation of MUC1/FL011 and STA2 and consequently starch metabolism and pseudohyphaI differentiation. The regulation conferred by MSS11 on the transcriptional levels of MUC1/FL011 and STA2 also appears to be dependent on signals generated specifically in the presence of low nitrogen and glucose. Mss11p does not have significant homology to any other yeast protein, with the exception of limited homology to the transcriptional activator F108p. However, several distinctive domains have been identified in the MSS11 gene product. Firstly, Mss11p contains polyglutamine and poly-asparagine domains. It also contains a putative ATP- or GTP-binding domain (P-Ioop), commonly found in proteins such as kinases, ATPases or GTPases. Two short stretches close to the N-terminal, labelled H1 and H2, share significant homology to the transcriptional activator, F108p. Both the H2 domain and the extreme C-terminal of Mss11p are able to stimulate RNA polymerase II dependent transcription. Furthermore, the H1 domain together with the P-Ioop negatively regulates the activation potential of the H2 domain. This study presents further insight into the functioning of Mss11p and the involvement of the separate activation and regulatory domains in mediating transcriptional activation and pseudohyphal differentiation in response to nutrient limitation. Genetic interactions between Mss11p and other factors involved in the regulation of pseudohyphal growth and starch degradation were revealed, and specific regions of Mss11p were shown to be required by these factors in order to achieve their required function. In addition, results obtained in this study implicates Mss11p in the regulation of Ca2+-dependent flocculation and suggest that the FL01 gene is also regulated by Mss11p in this capacity.