| Literature DB >> 24114446 |
Joep Schothorst1, Harish Nag Kankipati, Michaela Conrad, Dieter R Samyn, Griet Van Zeebroeck, Yulia Popova, Marta Rubio-Texeira, Bengt L Persson, Johan M Thevelein.
Abstract
In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae several nutrient transporters have been identified that possess an additional function as nutrient receptor. These transporters are induced when yeast cells are starved for their substrate, which triggers entry into stationary phase and acquirement of a low protein kinase A (PKA) phenotype. Re-addition of the lacking nutrient triggers exit from stationary phase and sudden activation of the PKA pathway, the latter being mediated by the nutrient transceptors. At the same time, the transceptors are ubiquitinated, endocytosed and sorted to the vacuole for breakdown. Investigation of the signaling function of the transceptors has provided a new read-out and new tools for gaining insight into the functionality of transporters. Identification of amino acid residues that bind co-transported ions in symporters has been challenging because the inactivation of transport by site-directed mutagenesis is not conclusive with respect to the cause of the inactivation. The discovery of nontransported agonists of the signaling function in transceptors has shown that transport is not required for signaling. Inactivation of transport with maintenance of signaling in transceptors supports that a true proton-binding residue was mutagenised. Determining the relationship between transport and induction of endocytosis has also been challenging, since inactivation of transport by mutagenesis easily causes loss of all affinity for the substrate. The use of analogues with different combinations of transport and signaling capacities has revealed that transport, ubiquitination and endocytosis can be uncoupled in several unexpected ways. The results obtained are consistent with transporters undergoing multiple substrate-induced conformational changes, which allow interaction with different accessory proteins to trigger specific downstream events.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24114446 PMCID: PMC3824880 DOI: 10.1007/s00294-013-0413-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Genet ISSN: 0172-8083 Impact factor: 3.886
Fig. 1Model of the Pho84 phosphate transceptor with two putative proton-binding residues allowing uncoupling of transport and signaling. The protein has 12 predicted transmembrane domains and functions as a phosphate/proton symporter. D178 and D358 are two conserved putative proton-binding residues, predicted to be located adjacent to the phosphate translocation pathway. Mutagenesis of D178 to E or N reduces V max with about 50 %, but does not lower signaling as measured by phosphate-induced activation of the PKA target trehalase. Mutagenesis of D358 to N strongly reduces transport to ≤20 % but does not affect signaling. Mutagenesis of D358 to E completely abolishes transport but only causes a 50 % drop in signaling
Fig. 2Specific compounds allow uncoupling of transport, ubiquitination, endocytosis and signaling in the Gap1 transceptor. a The uptake of an amino acid triggers a (series of) conformational changes, of which one allows the ubiquitination of Gap1. Ubiquitination and an additional conformational change are required to trigger endocytosis of Gap1. Signaling to PKA is triggered by an independent conformational event. b The dipeptide l-Leu-Gly is not transported but is able to trigger all subsequent events like a regular amino acid. c The dipeptide l-Asp-γ-Phe is also not transported but is only able to trigger the conformation that allows ubiquitination. d l-Lysine is transported but is not able to trigger signaling nor endocytosis. However, it can also induce the conformation that elicits ubiquitination. e l-histidine cannot trigger signaling but can induce the whole endocytic internalization process just like a regular amino acid