72 research outputs found

    Genomic Exploration of the Hemiascomycetous Yeasts: 1. A set of yeast species for molecular evolution studies11Sequences and annotations are accessible at: GĂ©noscope (http://www.genoscope.cns.fr), FEBS Letters Website (http://www.elsevier.nl/febs/show/), Bordeaux (http://cbi.genopole-bordeaux.fr/Genolevures) and were deposited into the EMBL database (accession number from AL392203 to AL441602).

    Get PDF
    AbstractThe identification of molecular evolutionary mechanisms in eukaryotes is approached by a comparative genomics study of a homogeneous group of species classified as Hemiascomycetes. This group includes Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the first eukaryotic genome entirely sequenced, back in 1996. A random sequencing analysis has been performed on 13 different species sharing a small genome size and a low frequency of introns. Detailed information is provided in the 20 following papers. Additional tables available on websites describe the ca. 20 000 newly identified genes. This wealth of data, so far unique among eukaryotes, allowed us to examine the conservation of chromosome maps, to identify the ‘yeast-specific’ genes, and to review the distribution of gene families into functional classes. This project conducted by a network of seven French laboratories has been designated ‘GĂ©nolevures’

    Genomic Exploration of the Hemiascomycetous Yeasts: 19. Ascomycetes-specific genes

    Get PDF
    AbstractComparisons of the 6213 predicted Saccharomyces cerevisiae open reading frame (ORF) products with sequences from organisms of other biological phyla differentiate genes commonly conserved in evolution from ‘maverick’ genes which have no homologue in phyla other than the Ascomycetes. We show that a majority of the ‘maverick’ genes have homologues among other yeast species and thus define a set of 1892 genes that, from sequence comparisons, appear ‘Ascomycetes-specific’. We estimate, retrospectively, that the S. cerevisiae genome contains 5651 actual protein-coding genes, 50 of which were identified for the first time in this work, and that the present public databases contain 612 predicted ORFs that are not real genes. Interestingly, the sequences of the ‘Ascomycetes-specific’ genes tend to diverge more rapidly in evolution than that of other genes. Half of the ‘Ascomycetes-specific’ genes are functionally characterized in S. cerevisiae, and a few functional categories are over-represented in them

    Enolase and Glycolytic Flux Play a Role in the Regulation of the Glucose Permease Gene RAG1 of Kluyveromyces lactis

    No full text
    We isolated a mutant, rag17, which is impaired in glucose induction of expression of the major glucose transporter gene RAG1. The RAG17 gene encodes a protein 87% identical to S. cerevisiae enolases (Eno1 and Eno2). The Kleno null mutant showed no detectable enolase enzymatic activity and has severe growth defects on glucose and gluconeogenic carbon sources, indicating that K. lactis has a single enolase gene. In addition to RAG1, the transcription of several glycolytic genes was also strongly reduced in the ΔKleno mutant. Moreover, the defect in RAG1 expression was observed in other mutants of the glycolytic pathway (hexokinase and phosphoglycerate kinase). Therefore, it seems that the enolase and a functional glycolytic flux are necessary for induction of expression of the Rag1 glucose permease in K. lactis

    The SWI/SNF KlSnf2 Subunit Controls the Glucose Signaling Pathway To Coordinate Glycolysis and Glucose Transport in Kluyveromyces lactis

    No full text
    International audienceIn Kluyveromyces lactis, the expression of the major glucose permease gene RAG1 is controlled by extracellular glucose through a signaling cascade similar to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Snf3/Rgt2/Rgt1 pathway. We have identified a key component of the K. lactis glucose signaling pathway by characterizing a new mutation, rag20-1, which impairs the regulation of RAG1 and hexokinase RAG5 genes by glucose. Functional complementation of the rag20-1 mutation identified the KlSNF2 gene, which encodes a protein 59% identical to S. cerevisiae Snf2, the major subunit of the SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex. Reverse transcription-quantitative PCR and chromatin immunoprecipitation analyses confirmed that the KlSnf2 protein binds to RAG1 and RAG5 promoters and promotes the recruitment of the basic helix-loop-helix Sck1 activator. Besides this transcriptional effect, KlSnf2 is also implicated in the glucose signaling pathway by controlling Sms1 and KlRgt1 posttranscriptional modifications.When KlSnf2 is absent, Sms1 is not degraded in the presence of glucose, leading to constitutive RAG1 gene repression by KlRgt1. Our work points out the crucial role played by KlSnf2 in the regulation of glucose transport and metabolism in K. lactis, notably, by suggesting a link between chromatin remodeling and the glucose signaling pathwa

    Connection Between the Rag4 Glucose Sensor and the KlRgt1 Repressor in Kluyveromyces lactis

    No full text
    The RAG4 gene encodes for the sole transmembrane glucose sensor of Kluyveromyces lactis. A rag4 mutation leads to a fermentation-deficient phenotype (Rag(−) phenotype) and to a severe defect in the expression of the major glucose transporter gene RAG1. A recessive extragenic suppressor of the rag4 mutation has been identified. It encodes a protein (KlRgt1) 31% identical to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rgt1 regulator of the HXT genes (ScRgt1). The Klrgt1 null mutant displays abnormally high levels of RAG1 expression in the absence of glucose but still presents an induction of RAG1 expression in the presence of glucose. KlRgt1 is therefore only a repressor of RAG1. As described for ScRgt1, the KlRgt1 repressor function is controlled by phosphorylation in response to high glucose concentration and this phosphorylation is dependent on the sensor Rag4 and the casein kinase Rag8. However, contrary to that observed with ScRgt1, KlRgt1 is always bound to the RAG1 promoter. This article reveals that the key components of the glucose-signaling pathway are conserved between S. cerevisiae and K. lactis, but points out major differences in Rgt1 regulation and function that might reflect different carbon metabolism of these yeasts
    • 

    corecore