| Literature DB >> 16759348 |
Erwin Swinnen1, Valeria Wanke, Johnny Roosen, Bart Smets, Frédérique Dubouloz, Ivo Pedruzzi, Elisabetta Cameroni, Claudio De Virgilio, Joris Winderickx.
Abstract
In recent years, the general understanding of nutrient sensing and signalling, as well as the knowledge about responses triggered by altered nutrient availability have greatly advanced. While initial studies were directed to top-down elucidation of single nutrient-induced pathways, recent investigations place the individual signalling pathways into signalling networks and pursue the identification of converging effector branches that orchestrate the dynamical responses to nutritional cues. In this review, we focus on Rim15, a protein kinase required in yeast for the proper entry into stationary phase (G0). Recent studies revealed that the activity of Rim15 is regulated by the interplay of at least four intercepting nutrient-responsive pathways.Entities:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16759348 PMCID: PMC1479807 DOI: 10.1186/1747-1028-1-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Div ISSN: 1747-1028 Impact factor: 5.130
Figure 1Typical culture-density profile of a fermentative batch culture of . Black line: A schematic representation of the increase in cell number and cell density of a batch culture of Saccharomyces cerevisiae inoculated in rich medium containing a rapidly fermentable sugar, e.g. glucose, as a carbon source. After a short adaptive lag phase, yeast consumes the sugar during the exponential fermentative growth phase. When the sugar becomes limiting, yeast cells enter the diauxic shift and reprogram their metabolic capacity from fermentation to respiration. In the post-diauxic growth phase, the cells consume ethanol, acetate and other products of the initial fermentation as carbon source. Finally, when these carbon sources are exhausted, the cells enter a quiescent state, the stationary phase (G0), with the ultimate goal of surviving the starvation period. Gray line: When exponentially growing yeast cells are transferred to medium containing glucose but missing an essential nutrient such as nitrogen or phosphate, they arrest growth and enter the G0 state due to nutrient deprivation.
Figure 3Schematic diagram illustrating the domain architecture of the All domains are drawn approximately to scale. Rim15 belongs to a group of conserved fungal proteins, which exhibit the same domain organization, including the N-terminal PAS and CCHC-type zinc finger domains, the central kinase catalytic domain (black ovals), with an insert of 188 amino acids between subdomains VII and VIII, that classifies Rim15 as a member of the conserved nuclear Dbf2-related (NDR) and large tumor suppressor (LATS) serine/threonine kinase subclasses of the protein kinase A, G, and C (AGC) class of kinases, and a C-terminal receiver (REC) domain. The PKA and the Pho85-Pho80 phosphorylation sites are indicated with open and closed arrows, respectively. The single high-stringency, putative 14-3-3 protein-binding site in Rim15 flanks amino acid T1075.