| Literature DB >> 29158977 |
Anna York-Lyon1, Kama Szereszewski1,2, Cindy Leung1, Jennifer Yixin Jin1, Rami Megarbane1, Bahram Samanfar1,3, Kristina Shostak1,3, Houman Moteshareie1, Maryam Hajikarimlou1, Sarah Shaikho4, Katayoun Omidi1, Mohsen Hooshyar1,5, Daniel Burnside1, Imelda Galván Márquez1, Tom Kazmirchuk1, Thet Naing4, Paula Ludovico6, Myron L Smith1, Mohan Babu7, Martin Holcik4,8, Ashkan Golshani1.
Abstract
The presence of acetic acid during industrial alcohol fermentation reduces the yield of fermentation by imposing additional stress on the yeast cells. The biology of cellular responses to stress has been a subject of vigorous investigations. Although much has been learned, details of some of these responses remain poorly understood. Members of heat shock chaperone HSP proteins have been linked to acetic acid and heat shock stress responses in yeast. Both acetic acid and heat shock have been identified to trigger different cellular responses including reduction of global protein synthesis and induction of programmed cell death. Yeast HSC82 and HSP82 code for two important heat shock proteins that together account for 1-2% of total cellular proteins. Both proteins have been linked to responses to acetic acid and heat shock. In contrast to the overall rate of protein synthesis which is reduced, the expression of HSC82 and HSP82 is induced in response to acetic acid stress. In the current study we identified two yeast genes DOM34 and RPL36A that are linked to acetic acid and heat shock sensitivity. We investigated the influence of these genes on the expression of HSP proteins. Our observations suggest that Dom34 and RPL36A influence translation in a CAP-independent manner.Entities:
Keywords: Acetic acid; DOM34; DOM34 and RPL36A; Gene deletion; HSP; Heat shock; Protein expression; RPL36A; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Yeast
Year: 2017 PMID: 29158977 PMCID: PMC5691786 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.4037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Evaluating the sensitivity of different strains to acetic acid and heat shock treatments.
Deletion of DOM34 and RPL36A results in increased sensitivity to acetic acid and heat shock treatments. Reintroduction of the deleted genes converted the sensitive phenotypes to the WT sensitivity level. All sensitivity analyses are performed in triplicate with similar results. Acetic acid treatment at concentration of 220 mM was used for two hours. Heat shock was performed at 37 °C. Deletion of RPL31a is used as a representative negative control to indicate that acetic acid sensitivity is not correlated with defective translation.
Figure 2HSP82 RNA content analyses.
RT-PCR analysis was performed to study mRNA content. HSP82 mRNA contents are related to those of control strains grown under control (blue) or exposed to acetic acid (red) conditions. PGK1 mRNA content was used for normalization. There are no statistically significant (P-value ≤ 0.05) differences in mRNA contents between WT and tested mutants for control or acetic acid treated cells. Normalized HSP82 mRNA contents were increased by approximately two fold in response to acetic acid exposure. The average values are obtained from at least three independent experiments.
Figure 3Expression analysis of β-galactosidase reporter gene.
(A) Quantification of β-galactosidase expression under the control of different HSP82 and URE2 IRES elements. Expression levels for the mutants are normalized to the expression level of WT that is set to 1. Deletion of DOM34 or RPL36A reduced the levels of β-galactosidase expression mediated by different IRES elements (P-value ≤ 0.05). (B) β-galactosidase mRNA content analysis. β-galactosidase mRNA contents are related to those of the control strain. PGK1 mRNA content was used for normalization. There are no statistically significant differences in mRNA contents between WT and tested mutants. (C) CAP-dependent β-galactosidase mRNA translation. During CAP-dependent translation, when β-galactosidase mRNA translation is independent of an IRES-element, deletion of either DOM34 or RPL36A has no statistically significant difference in β-galactosidase expression. The average values are obtained from at least three independent experiments.
Figure 4Knockdown of PELO reduced the Hsp90 levels in mammalian cells.
(A) Western blot analysis of HeLa cells. (B) HeLa cells carrying non-targeting (siC) or PELO-targeting (siPELO) siRNAs indicate that when PELO is knocked down, Hsp90 levels are reduced. The average values are obtained from at least three independent experiments.
Figure 5Genetic interaction analysis for DOM34 and RPL36A.
(A) DOM34 interacts with genes involved in ribosome biogenesis (P-value: 1.12E−11) (B) and RPL36A interacted negatively with genes linked to structural constituent of ribosome (P-value: 3.11E−07) Under standard laboratory conditions. Under stress conditions, new set of interactions between genes involved in translation regulation and DOM34 (P-value: 3.27E−06)(A) and RPL36A (P-value: 7.47E−09)(B) are formed. ∗Represents interactions that were included from literature. A Represents conditional genetic interactions under acetic acid treatment (110 mM) for 2 h. C Represents conditional genetic interactions under cycloheximide (20 ng/ml) treatment. H Represents conditional genetic interactions under heat shock (37 °C) condition. P Represents conditional genetic interactions under paromomycin (10 mg/ml) condition. R Represents conditional genetic interactions under rapamycin condition (2 ng/ml). S Represents genetic interactions under standard laboratory conditions.
Figure 6Reversal of phenotypes by re-introduction of target genes.
(A) Re-introduction of deleted target genes DOM34 and RPL36A in double mutants. Representative examples for re-introduction of target genes in double gene deletion mutants that reverse the observed genetic interactions phenotype are shown. The sick phenotypes of double gene knockout strains are reversed when target genes are placed back into the corresponding mutant strains. (B) Spot test confirmation for phenotypic suppression analysis of DOM34 and RPL36A. Representative examples for gene deletion mutants (rpl43aΔ and rps29bΔ) with sensitivity to acetic acid (220 mM, 2 h treatment) that are compensated by overexpression of DOM34 and RPL36A, respectively.