Literature DB >> 25724885

Control of Plasma Membrane Permeability by ABC Transporters.

Svetlana Khakhina1, Soraya S Johnson1, Raman Manoharlal1, Sarah B Russo2, Corinne Blugeon3, Sophie Lemoine3, Anna B Sunshine4, Maitreya J Dunham4, L Ashley Cowart2, Frédéric Devaux5, W Scott Moye-Rowley6.   

Abstract

ATP-binding cassette transporters Pdr5 and Yor1 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae control the asymmetric distribution of phospholipids across the plasma membrane as well as serving as ATP-dependent drug efflux pumps. Mutant strains lacking these transporter proteins were found to exhibit very different resistance phenotypes to two inhibitors of sphingolipid biosynthesis that act either late (aureobasidin A [AbA]) or early (myriocin [Myr]) in the pathway leading to production of these important plasma membrane lipids. These pdr5Δ yor1 strains were highly AbA resistant but extremely sensitive to Myr. We provide evidence that these phenotypic changes are likely due to modulation of the plasma membrane flippase complexes, Dnf1/Lem3 and Dnf2/Lem3. Flippases act to move phospholipids from the outer to the inner leaflet of the plasma membrane. Genetic analyses indicate that lem3Δ mutant strains are highly AbA sensitive and Myr resistant. These phenotypes are fully epistatic to those seen in pdr5Δ yor1 strains. Direct analysis of AbA-induced signaling demonstrated that loss of Pdr5 and Yor1 inhibited the AbA-triggered phosphorylation of the AGC kinase Ypk1 and its substrate Orm1. Microarray experiments found that a pdr5Δ yor1 strain induced a Pdr1-dependent induction of the entire Pdr regulon. Our data support the view that Pdr5/Yor1 negatively regulate flippase function and activity of the nuclear Pdr1 transcription factor. Together, these data argue that the interaction of the ABC transporters Pdr5 and Yor1 with the Lem3-dependent flippases regulates permeability of AbA via control of plasma membrane protein function as seen for the high-affinity tryptophan permease Tat2.
Copyright © 2015, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25724885      PMCID: PMC4421010          DOI: 10.1128/EC.00021-15

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eukaryot Cell        ISSN: 1535-9786


  74 in total

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