| Literature DB >> 32529692 |
Yuliia Andreieva1, Yana Petrovska1, Oleksii Lyzak2, Wen Liu1,3, Yingqian Kang3,4, Kostyantyn Dmytruk1, Andriy Sibirny1,5.
Abstract
Riboflavin or vitamin B2 is an essential dietary component for humans and animals that is the precursor of flavin coenzymes flavin mononucleotide and flavin adenine dinucleotide involved in numerous enzymatic reactions. The flavinogenic yeast Candida famata overproduces riboflavin under iron starvation; however, regulation of this process is poorly understood. Regulatory gene SEF1 encoding transcription activator has been identified. Its deletion blocks yeast ability to overproduce riboflavin under iron starvation. It was shown here that the SEF1 promoters from other flavinogenic (Candida albicans) and non-flavinogenic (Candida tropicalis) yeasts fused with the open reading frame (ORF) of SEF1 gene from C. famata are able to restore riboflavin oversynthesis in sef1Δ mutants. It is known that in the pathogenic flavinogenic yeast C. albicans, Sfu1 (GATA-type transcription factor) represses SEF1. Here, we found that deletion of SFU1 gene in wild-type C. famata leads to riboflavin oversynthesis. Moreover, it was shown that disruption of VMA1 gene (coding for vacuolar ATPase subunit A) also results in riboflavin oversynthesis in C. famata.Entities:
Keywords: Candida famata; SEF1; SFU1; VMA1; riboflavin; yeast
Year: 2020 PMID: 32529692 DOI: 10.1002/yea.3503
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Yeast ISSN: 0749-503X Impact factor: 3.239