32 research outputs found

    The Development of Metabolomic Sampling Procedures for Pichia pastoris, and Baseline Metabolome Data

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    Metabolic profiling is increasingly being used to investigate a diverse range of biological questions. Due to the rapid turnover of intracellular metabolites it is important to have reliable, reproducible techniques for sampling and sample treatment. Through the use of non-targeted analytical techniques such as NMR and GC-MS we have performed a comprehensive quantitative investigation of sampling techniques for Pichia pastoris. It was clear that quenching metabolism using solutions based on the standard cold methanol protocol caused some metabolite losses from P. pastoris cells. However, these were at a low level, with the NMR results indicating metabolite increases in the quenching solution below 5% of their intracellular level for 75% of metabolites identified; while the GC-MS results suggest a slightly higher level with increases below 15% of their intracellular values. There were subtle differences between the four quenching solutions investigated but broadly, they all gave similar results. Total culture extraction of cells + broth using high cell density cultures typical of P. pastoris fermentations, was an efficient sampling technique for NMR analysis and provided a gold standard of intracellular metabolite levels; however, salts in the media affected the GC-MS analysis. Furthermore, there was no benefit in including an additional washing step in the quenching process, as the results were essentially identical to those obtained just by a single centrifugation step. We have identified the major high-concentration metabolites found in both the extra- and intracellular locations of P. pastoris cultures by NMR spectroscopy and GC-MS. This has provided us with a baseline metabolome for P. pastoris for future studies. The P. pastoris metabolome is significantly different from that of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, with the most notable difference being the production of high concentrations of arabitol by P. pastoris

    Accumulation and release of the osmolyte glycerol is independent of the putative MIP channel Spac977.17p in <I>Schizosaccharomyces pombe</I>

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    NatuurwetenskappeMikrobiologiePlease help us populate SUNScholar with the post print version of this article. It can be e-mailed to: [email protected]

    Conservation and release of osmolytes by yeasts during hypo-osmotic stress.

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    Functional analysis of the Zygosaccharomyces rouxii Fps1p homologue

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    The osmotolerant yeast Zygosaccharomyces rouxii accumulates the polyols glycerol and D-arabitol intracellularly in response to hyperosmotic stress, but the membrane transport proteins regulating polyol accumulation have not been studied. We have cloned and characterized a FPS1 homologue in Z. rouxii NRRL Y2547, and its sequence revealed a 2709 bp open reading frame encoding a peptide of 692 deduced amino acids with 56.9% identity to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Fps1p. The role of this putative membrane channel protein in polyol accumulation and release during osmoregulation was investigated. The Z. rouxii FPS1 (ZrFPS1) complemented the S. cerevisiae fps1Δ growth defect and glycerol release upon hypo-osmotic shock. Deletion of ZrFPS1 did not affect growth on glycerol as sole carbon source, suggesting that other transport proteins are involved in the uptake of glycerol. However, mutants lacking ZrFPS1 exhibited a significant decrease in glycerol and D-arabitol efflux and poor growth during hypo-osmotic conditions, suggesting that ZrFPS1 might be involved in D-arabitol transport in addition to glycerol. This is the first demonstration of a yeast gene that affects D-arabitol transport. The full-length ZrFPS1 gene sequence including upstream promoter has been deposited in the public database under Accession No. AY488133. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Articl

    Accumulation and release of the osmolyte glycerol is independent of the putative MIP channel Spac977.17p in Schizosaccharomyces pombe

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    Schizosaccharomyces pombe accumulates glycerol as an osmotic regulatory solute in response to hyper-osmotic conditions. Upon a decrease in the external osmolarity, the intracellular glycerol levels should be adjusted in order to attain osmotic homeostasis. In this study, the patterns and kinetics of glycerol export from S. pombe were investigated. Upon a decrease in external osmolarity, glycerol was rapidly exported from cells to the external medium. The amount of glycerol released from the cells was proportional to the degree of change in the external osmolarity. The export process was well controlled and was not affected by reduced temperature. This points to S. pombe controlling glycerol export using specialized facilitating proteins as has been found in Saccharomyces cerevisiae where a MIP family channel protein Fps1p is involved. Analysis of the S. pombe databases revealed a putative transport protein (Spac977.17p) with homology to glycerol channel proteins of the MIP family. However, expression of the gene into the S. cerevisiae strain lacking a glycerol channel protein (fps1Delta mutant), did not complement the defect in glycerol export during hypo-osmotic stress. Deletion of spac977.17, did not affect glycerol accumulation or release in S. pombe. The patterns and kinetics of glycerol release in the mutant were similar to those of the wild type strains suggesting that the export process is independent of Spac977.17p, the only putative MIP family glycerol channel homologue in S. pombe. While the process of glycerol export in response to hypo-osmotic stress is similar to budding yeast, the underlying molecular mechanism in S. pombe appears distinct from that described in S. cerevisiae. Further studies are needed to elucidate the physiological role of the Spac977.17p channel

    Isolation and characterization of the TIM10 homologue from the yeast Pichia sorbitophila a putative component of the mitochondrial protein import system

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    The Saccharomyces cerevisiae TIM10 gene encodes one of the few essential mitochondrial proteins that are required for the import of nuclear-encoded precursor proteins from the cytosol and their subsequent sorting into the different mitochondrial compartments. We have isolated and characterized a putative homologue of TIM10 from the halotolerant yeast Pichia sorbitophila. The Pichia TIM10 gene encodes a protein of 90 amino acids with 66% identity to S. cerevisiae Tim10p. It was capable of suppresing the temperature sensitivity of tim10-1 mutant in S. cerevisiae, suggesting that Pichia TIM10 is both a functional and structural homologue of S. cerevisiae TIM10. The putative Pichia TIM10 gene product contains all the four conserved cysteine residues and the two CX3C motifs typical of the Tim family proteins in the mitochondrial intermembrances space. Using anti Tim10p serum, Western blots detected a protein of about 10 kDa, suggesting that the Pichia Tim10p is a mitochondrial protein. The results suggest that mitochondrial import and sorting systems might be also strongly conserved in other fungi. The coding sequence of the P. sorbitophila TIM10 has been deposited in the EMBL Nucleotide Sequence Database under Accession No. AJ243940. Copyright (C) 2000 John Wiley and Sons, Ltd.Articl

    Cloning, sequencing and characterization of a gene encoding dihydroxyacetone kinase from Zygosaccharomyces rouxii NRRL2547

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    The dihydroxyacetone pathway, an alternative pathway for the dissimilation of glycerol via reduction by glycerol dehydrogenase and subsequent phosphorylation by dihydroxyacetone (DHA) kinase, is activated in the yeasts Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Zygosaccharomyces rouxii during osmotic stress. In experiments aimed at investigating the physiological function of the DHA pathway in Z. rouxii, a typical osmotolerant yeast, we cloned and characterized a DAK gene encoding dihydroxyacetone kinase from Z. rouxii NRRL 2547. Sequence analysis revealed a 1761 bp open reading frame, encoding a peptide composed of 587 deduced amino acids with the predicted molecular weight of 61 664 Da. As the amino acid sequence was most closely homologous (68% identity) to the S. cerevisiae Dak1p, we named the gene and protein ZrDAK1 and ZrDak1p, respectively. A putative ATP binding site was also found but no consensus element associated with osmoregulation was found in the upstream region of the ZrDAK1 gene. The ZrDAK1 gene complemented a S. cerevisiae W303-1A dak1Δdak2Δ strain by improving the growth of the mutant on 50 mmol/l dihydroxyacetone and by increasing the tolerance to dihydroxyacetone in a medium containing 5% sodium chloride, suggesting that it is a functional homologue of the S. cerevisiae DAK1. However, expression of the ZrDAK1 gene in the S. cerevisiae dak1Δdak2Δ strain had no significant effect on glycerol levels during osmotic stress. The ZrDAK1 sequence has been deposited in the public data bases under Accession No. AJ294719; regions upstream and downstream of ZrDAK1 are deposited as Accession Nos AJ294739 and AJ294720, respectively. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Articl

    Isolation and characterisation of the TIM10 homologue from the yeast <I>Pichia sorbitophila</I>: A putative component of the mitochondrial protein import system.

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    NatuurwetenskappeMikrobiologiePlease help us populate SUNScholar with the post print version of this article. It can be e-mailed to: [email protected]
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