37 research outputs found
The Transcriptional Repressor TupA in Aspergillus niger Is Involved in Controlling Gene Expression Related to Cell Wall Biosynthesis, Development, and Nitrogen Source Availability.
The Tup1-Cyc8 (Ssn6) complex is a well characterized and conserved general transcriptional repressor complex in eukaryotic cells. Here, we report the identification of the Tup1 (TupA) homolog in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus niger in a genetic screen for mutants with a constitutive expression of the agsA gene. The agsA gene encodes a putative alpha-glucan synthase, which is induced in response to cell wall stress in A. niger. Apart from the constitutive expression of agsA, the selected mutant was also found to produce an unknown pigment at high temperatures. Complementation analysis with a genomic library showed that the tupA gene could complement the phenotypes of the mutant. Screening of a collection of 240 mutants with constitutive expression of agsA identified sixteen additional pigment-secreting mutants, which were all mutated in the tupA gene. The phenotypes of the tupA mutants were very similar to the phenotypes of a tupA deletion strain. Further analysis of the tupA-17 mutant and the DeltatupA mutant revealed that TupA is also required for normal growth and morphogenesis. The production of the pigment at 37 degrees C is nitrogen source-dependent and repressed by ammonium. Genome-wide expression analysis of the tupA mutant during exponential growth revealed derepression of a large group of diverse genes, including genes related to development and cell wall biosynthesis, and also protease-encoding genes that are normally repressed by ammonium. Comparison of the transcriptome of up-regulated genes in the tupA mutant showed limited overlap with the transcriptome of caspofungin-induced cell wall stress-related genes, suggesting that TupA is not a general suppressor of cell wall stress-induced genes. We propose that TupA is an important repressor of genes related to development and nitrogen metabolism
Functional and regulatory profiling of energy metabolism in fission yeast
Background: The control of energy metabolism is fundamental for cell growth and function and anomalies in it
are implicated in complex diseases and ageing. Metabolism in yeast cells can be manipulated by supplying
different carbon sources: yeast grown on glucose rapidly proliferates by fermentation, analogous to tumour cells
growing by aerobic glycolysis, whereas on non-fermentable carbon sources metabolism shifts towards respiration.
Results: We screened deletion libraries of fission yeast to identify over 200 genes required for respiratory growth.
Growth media and auxotrophic mutants strongly influenced respiratory metabolism. Most genes uncovered in the
mutant screens have not been implicated in respiration in budding yeast. We applied gene-expression profiling
approaches to compare steady-state fermentative and respiratory growth and to analyse the dynamic adaptation to
respiratory growth. The transcript levels of most genes functioning in energy metabolism pathways are coherently
tuned, reflecting anticipated differences in metabolic flows between fermenting and respiring cells. We show that
acetyl-CoA synthase, rather than citrate lyase, is essential for acetyl-CoA synthesis in fission yeast. We also investigated
the transcriptional response to mitochondrial damage by genetic or chemical perturbations, defining a retrograde
response that involves the concerted regulation of distinct groups of nuclear genes that may avert harm from
mitochondrial malfunction.
Conclusions: This study provides a rich framework of the genetic and regulatory basis of energy metabolism in fission
yeast and beyond, and it pinpoints weaknesses of commonly used auxotroph mutants for investigating metabolism. As
a model for cellular energy regulation, fission yeast provides an attractive and complementary system to budding yeast