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1.
The kinetics of glucose repression of cytochrome c synthesis was measured by a radioimmune assay. When 5 or 10% glucose was added to a derepressed culture, the rate of cytochrome c synthesis was reduced to the repressed level with a half-life of 2 min. The addition of 1 or 0.5% glucose repressed the rate of cytochrome c synthesis to the same level as high glucose concentrations but with a longer half-life of 3 min. Glucose repression had no effect on the stability or function of the cytochrome c protein. Cellular levels of active cytochrome c mRNA during glucose repression were measured by translation of total cellular polyadenylic acid-containing RNA and immunoprecipitation cytochrome c from the translation products. The results of these measurements indicate that glucose represses the rate of cytochrome c synthesis through a reduction in the level of translatable cytochrome c mRNA.  相似文献   

2.
We describe the characterization of a mutation of the locus GLR1. This mutation allowed for (i) the glucose repression-insensitive synthesis ot the enzymes maltase, galactokinase, alpha-galactosidase, reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-cytochrome c reductase, and cytochrome c oxidase and (ii) growth on maltose in the presence of the gratuitous glucose repressor D-glucosamine. The glucosamine resistance cosegregated with the glucose-insensitive synthesis of the enzymes listed above. In addition, crosses between the glucosamine-resistant mutant and isogenic sensitive strains gave only tetrads containing two resistant and two sensitive spores. Thus, a single pleiotropic mutation is responsible for both phenotypes. We call the locus GLR1, for glucose regulation, and the glucose repression-insensitive mutation glr1-1.  相似文献   

3.
A selection system has been devised for isolating hexokinase PII structural gene mutants that cause defects in carbon catabolite repression, but retain normal catalytic activity. We used diploid parental strains with homozygotic defects in the hexokinase PI structural gene and with only one functional hexokinase PII allele. Of 3,000 colonies tested, 35 mutants (hex1r) did not repress the synthesis of invertase, maltase, malate dehydrogenase, and respiratory enzymes. These mutants had additional hexokinase PII activity. In contrast to hex1 mutants (Entian et al., Mol. Gen. Genet. 156:99-105, 1977; F.K. Zimmermann and I. Scheel, Mol. Gen. Genet. 154:75-82, 1977), which were allelic to structural gene mutants of hexokinase PII and had no catalytic activity (K.-D. Entian, Mol. Gen. Gent. 178:633-637, 1980), the hex1r mutants sporulated hardly at all or formed aberrant cells. Those ascospores obtained were mostly inviable. As the few viable hex1r segregants were sterile, triploid cells were constructed to demonstrate allelism between hex1r mutants and hexokinase PII structural gene mutants. Metabolite concentrations, growth rate, and ethanol production were the same in hex1r mutants and their corresponding wild-type strains. Recombination of hexokinase and glucokinase alleles gave strains with different specific activities. The defect in carbon catabolite repression was strongly associated with the defect in hexokinase PII and was independent of the glucose phosphorylating capacity. Hence, a secondary effect caused by reduced hexose phosphorylation was not responsible for the repression defect in hex1 mutants. These results, and those with the hex1r mutants isolated, strongly supported our earlier hypothesis that hexokinase PII is a bifunctional enzyme with (i) catalytic activity and (ii) a regulatory component triggering carbon catabolite repression (Entian, Mol. Gen. Genet. 178:633-637, 1980; K.-D. Entian and D. Mecke, J. Biol. Chem. 257:870-874, 1982).  相似文献   

4.
Genetic and biochemical analyses showed that hexokinase PII is mainly responsible for glucose repression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, indicating a regulatory domain mediating glucose repression. Hexokinase PI/PII hybrids were constructed to identify the supposed regulatory domain and the repression behavior was observed in the respective transformants. The hybrid constructs allowed the identification of a domain (amino acid residues 102-246) associated with the fructose/glucose phosphorylation ratio. This ratio is characteristic of each isoenzyme, therefore this domain probably corresponds to the catalytic domain of hexokinases PI and PII. Glucose repression was associated with the C-terminal part of hexokinase PII, but only these constructs had high catalytic activity whereas opposite constructs were less active. Reduction of hexokinase PII activity by promoter deletion was inversely followed by a decrease in the glucose repression of invertase and maltase. These results did not support the hypothesis that a specific regulatory domain of hexokinase PII exists which is independent of the hexokinase PII catalytic domain. Gene disruptions of hexokinases further decreased repression when hexokinase PI was removed in addition to hexokinase PII. This proved that hexokinase PI also has some function in glucose repression. Stable hexokinase PI overproducers were nearly as effective for glucose repression as hexokinase PII. This showed that hexokinase PI is also capable of mediating glucose repression. All these results demonstrated that catalytically active hexokinases are indispensable for glucose repression. To rule out any further glycolytic reactions necessary for glucose repression, phosphoglucoisomerase activity was gradually reduced. Cells with residual phosphoglucoisomerase activities of less than 10% showed reduced growth on glucose. Even 1% residual activity was sufficient for normal glucose repression, which proved that additional glycolytic reactions are not necessary for glucose repression. To verify the role of hexokinases in glucose repression, the third glucose-phosphorylating enzyme, glucokinase, was stably overexpressed in a hexokinase PI/PII double-null mutant. No strong effect on glucose repression was observed, even in strains with 2.6 U/mg glucose-phosphorylating activity, which is threefold increased compared to wild-type cells. This result indicated that glucose repression is only associated with the activity of hexokinases PI and PII and not with that of glucokinase.  相似文献   

5.
The mechanism of Bax-dependent cytochrome c release is still controversial and may also depend on the actual localisation of cytochrome C: (i) we studied the distribution of cytochrome c in sub-fractions of rat kidney mitochondria and found that 10-20% of the total cytochrome c was associated at the peripheral inner membrane and to some extent organised in the contact sites. (ii) Cytochrome c concentrations in the contact site fractions varied related to surface bound hexokinase activity. It decreased upon reduction of contact sites by glycerol or specific dissociation of the VDAC-ANT complexes by bongkrekate, whereas it increased upon induction of contacts by dextran or association of VDAC-ANT complexes by atractyloside. (iii) The outer membrane pore (VDAC) acquires high capacity for hexokinase binding by interacting with the ANT. Thus, surface-attached hexokinase protein indicated the frequency of VDAC-ANT complexes and the correlation between hexokinase activity and cytochrome c suggested association of the latter to the complexes. (iv) Substances affecting exclusively the structure of either hexokinase (glucose-6P) or cytochrome c (borate) led to a decrease only of the effected protein without changing the concentration of other contact site constituents. (v) Hexokinase was furthermore used as a tool to isolate the contact site forming complex of outer membrane VDAC and inner membrane ANT from Triton-dissolved membranes. Cytochrome c remained attached to the hexokinase VDAC-ANT complexes that were reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles. (vi) The vesicles were loaded with malate and BaxDeltaC released the endogenous cytochrome c from the reconstituted complexes without forming unspecific pores for malate. BaxDeltaC targeted a cytochrome c fraction associated at the VDAC-ANT complex. The cytochrome c organisation was dependent on the actual structure of VDAC and ANT. Thus, the BaxDeltaC effect was suppressed either by hexokinase utilising glucose and ATP or by bongkrekic acid both influencing the pore and ANT structure.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of the mitochondrial protein synthesis inhibitor chloramphenicol and the mitochondrial F0 adenosine triphosphatase inhibitor oligomycin on the synthesis of nucleus-encoded cytochrome c protein were studied. Both inhibitors stimulated cytochrome c protein synthesis in the derepressed state (growth in media containing 2% raffinose) but had no effect on the synthesis of the cytochrome c protein in the repressed state (growth in media containing 5% glucose). Oligomycin uncoupled the synthesis of the apoprotein from its processing into the hemoprotein. Neither antibiotic had a significant effect on the rate of glucose repression of cytochrome protein synthesis. The kinetics of cytochrome c derepression and the effects of these two antibiotics on these kinetics were also studied. Cells were derepressed by transfer from glucose- to faffinose-containing media, and the rate of cytochrome c synthesis increased from the repressed to the derepressed level during the second hour of derepression. Chloramphenicol delayed this derepression, but after 5 h the rate of cytochrome c protein synthesis increased to twice the rate of synthesis in uninhibited cells. On the other hand, oligomycin inhibited derepression of cytochrome c. These results are discussed with respect to the effects of mitochondrial function in the derepressed and repressed states and during the processes of repression and derepression of cytochrome c.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract Hexose phosphorylation was studied in Aspergillus nidulans wild-type and in a fructose non-utilising mutant ( frA ). The data indicate the presence of at least one hexokinase and one glucokinase in wild-type A. nidulans , while the fr A1 mutant lacks hexokinase activity. The A. nidulans gene encoding hexokinase was isolated by complementation of the fr A1 mutation. The absence of hexokinase activity in the fr A1 mutant did not interfere with glucose repression of the enzymes involved in alcohol and l-arabinose catabolism. This suggests that, unlike the situation in yeast where mutation of hexokinase PII abolishes glucose repression, the A. nidulans hexokinase might not be involved in glucose repression.  相似文献   

8.
Two glucose-phosphorylating enzymes, a hexokinase phosphorylating both glucose and fructose, and a glucose-specific glucokinase were electrophoretically separated in the methylotrophic yeastHansenula polymorpha. Hexokinase-negative mutants were isolated inH. polymorpha by using mutagenesis, selection and genetic crosses. Regulation of synthesis of the sugar-repressed alcohol oxidase, catalase and maltase was studied in different hexose kinase mutants. In the wild type and in mutants possessing either hexokinase or glucokinase, glucose repressed the synthesis of maltase, alcohol oxidase and catalase. Glucose repression of alcohol oxidase and catalase was abolished in mutants lacking both glucose-phosphorylating enzymes (i.e. in double kinase-negative mutants). Thus, glucose repression inH. polymorpha cells requires a glucose-phosphorylating enzyme, either hexokinase or glucokinase. The presence of fructose-phosphorylating hexokinase in the cell was specifically needed for fructose repression of alcohol oxidase, catalase and maltase. Hence, glucose or fructose has to be phosphorylated in order to cause repression of the synthesis of these enzymes inH. polymorpha suggesting that sugar repression in this yeast therefore relies on the catalytic activity of hexose kinases.  相似文献   

9.
The relationship between the xylose induced decrease in hexokinase PII activity and the derepression of invertase synthesis in yeast is described. When xylose was added to cells growing in a chemostat under nitrogen limitation, the catabolic repression was supressed as shown by the large increase on invertase levels even if glucose remained high. The glucose phosphorylating-enzymes were separated by hydroxylapatite chromatography and it is shown that the treatment with xylose is accompanied by a loss of 98% hexokinase PII and a 50% of the PI isoenzyme, whereas the levels of glucokinase as well as those of glucose-6-phosphate, fructose-6-phosphate, pyruvate and ATP remained unaffected.The analysis of the enzymes present in cells grown in ethanol, limiting glucose and high glucose, shows that hexokinase PII predominates in cells under catabolic repression, the opposite is true for glucokinase, whereas hexokinase PI remains unaffected.  相似文献   

10.
The regulatory hexokinase PII mutants isolated previously (K.-D. Entian and K.-U. Fröhlich, J. Bacteriol. 158:29-35, 1984) were characterized further. These mutants were defective in glucose repression. The mutation was thought to be in the hexokinase PII structural gene, but it did not affect the catalytic activity of the enzyme. Hence, a regulatory domain for glucose repression was postulated. For further understanding of this regulatory system, the mutationally altered hexokinase PII proteins were isolated from five mutants obtained independently and characterized by their catalytic constants and bisubstrate kinetics. None of these characteristics differed from those of the wild type, so the catalytic center of the mutant enzymes remained unchanged. The only noticeable difference observed was that the in vivo modified form of hexokinase PII, PIIM, which has been described recently (K.-D. Entian and E. Kopetzki, Eur. J. Biochem. 146:657-662, 1985), was absent from one of these mutants. It is possible that the PIIM modification is directly connected with the triggering of glucose repression. To establish with certainty that the mutation is located in the hexokinase PII structural gene, the genes of these mutants were isolated after transforming a hexokinaseless mutant strain and selecting for concomitant complementation of the nuclear function. Unlike hexokinase PII wild-type transformants, glucose repression was not restored in the hexokinase PII mutant transformants. In addition mating experiments with these transformants followed by tetrad analysis of sporulated diploids gave clear evidence of allelism to the hexokinase PII structural gene.  相似文献   

11.
Glucocorticoids induce apoptosis in lymphocytes by causing the release of cytochrome c into the cytosol; however, the events in the signaling phase between translocation of the steroid-receptor complex to the nucleus and the release of cytochrome c have not been elucidated. Previously, we found that, in response to steroid treatment, WEHI7.2 mouse thymic lymphoma cells overexpressing catalase (CAT38) show delayed apoptosis (delayed cytochrome c release) compared to the parental cells, while Bcl-2 overexpressing cells (Hb12) are protected from steroid-induced apoptosis. In lymphocytes, glucocorticoid treatment decreases glucose uptake. Both glucose deprivation and the attendant ATP drop are known inducers of apoptosis. Therefore, we used (31)P and (1)H NMR spectroscopy to compare metabolic profiles of WEHI7.2, CAT38 and Hb12 cells in the presence and absence of dexamethasone to determine: (1) whether glucocorticoid effects on glucose metabolism contribute to the mechanism of steroid-induced apoptosis; and (2) whether catalase or Bcl-2 overexpression altered metabolism thereby providing a mechanism of steroid resistance. Loss of mitochondrial hexokinase activity was correlated to the induction of apoptosis in WEHI7.2 and CAT38 cells. CAT38 and Hb12 cells have an altered basal metabolism which includes increases in hexokinase activity, lactate production when subcultured into new medium, use of mitochondria for ATP production and potentially increased glutaminolysis. These data suggest that: (1) glucocorticoid effects on glucose metabolism may contribute to the mechanism of steroid-induced lymphocyte apoptosis; and (2) the altered metabolism seen in catalase and Bcl-2 overexpressing cells may contribute to both the steroid resistance and increased tumorigenicity of these variants.  相似文献   

12.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae regulatory genes CAT1 and CAT3 constitute a positive control circuit necessary for derepression of gluconeogenic and disaccharide-utilizing enzymes. Mutations within these genes are epistatic to hxk2 and hex2, which cause defects in glucose repression. cat1 and cat3 mutants are unable to grow in the presence of nonfermentable carbon sources or maltose. Stable gene disruptions were constructed inside these genes, and the resulting growth deficiencies were used for selecting epistatic mutations. The revertants obtained were tested for glucose repression, and those showing altered regulatory properties were further investigated. Most revertants belonged to a single complementation group called cat4. This recessive mutation caused a defect in glucose repression of invertase, maltase, and iso-1-cytochrome c. Additionally, hexokinase activity was increased. Gluconeogenic enzymes are still normally repressible in cat4 mutants. The occurrence of recombination of cat1::HIS3 and cat3::LEU2 with some cat4 alleles allowed significant growth in the presence of ethanol, which could be attributed to a partial derepression of gluconeogenic enzymes. The cat4 complementation group was tested for allelism with hxk2, hex2, cat80, cid1, cyc8, and tup1 mutations, which were previously described as affecting glucose repression. Allelism tests and tetrad analysis clearly proved that the cat4 complementation group is a new class of mutant alleles affecting carbon source-dependent gene expression.  相似文献   

13.
A method is described for the preparation of spheroplasts in high yield from Schizosaccharomyces pombe, by treating cells grown in the presence of glucose and deoxyglucose with snail digestive enzymes. Gentle disruption of such spheroplasts yielded homogenates, from which marker enzymes for nuclei (NAD pyrophosphorylase) and mitochondria (cytochrome c oxidase activity and spectroscopically-detectable cytochromes a + a3) could be quantitatively sedimented by low-speed centrifugation. In contrast to previous findings with Saccharomyces carlsbergensis, cytochrome c oxidase and another mitochondrial enzyme, succinate dehydrogenase, were completely sedimentable by zonal centrifugation in sucrose gradients in the presence of either 2 mM-MgCl2 or 0-4 mM-EDTA. Mitochondria were apparently smaller and of lower buoyant density in gradients containing EDTA. The bulk of the total units of malate dehydrogenase and NADH; cytochrome c oxidoreductase sedimented with mitochondria, whereas NADPH: cytochrome c oxidoreductase was located in fractions containing no mitochondria. The distributions of mitochondrial enzymes were heterogeneous in populations of mitochondria separated on the basis of size or density. The possible origins of mitochondrial heterogeneity in extracts of S. pombe are discussed with special reference to changes in the enzyme activities of cells during the cell cycle.  相似文献   

14.
Mutant LGM-128 of Hansenula polymorpha harbors the recessive mutation glr2-1 which confers a complex pleiotropic phenotype, the major feature of which is the metabolically unnecessary induction of methanol utilization metabolism (C1 metabolism) during growth on glucose, whether or not methanol is in the medium. Therefore, in this mutant, peroxisomes are formed and proliferate upon cultivation in glucose-containing media. In these media, LGM-128 shows induction levels of C1 metabolism that are similar to those observed in methanol-containing media. This indicates that GLR2 controls the repression-derepression process stimulated by glucose and that the induction process triggered by methanol plays only a minor role in activating C1 metabolism. Cultivating LGM-128 in methanol and then transferring it to glucose media revealed that active degradative processes occur, leading to the disappearance of C1 metabolism. This observation suggests that, although stimulated by glucose, the two processes are controlled by elements which are, at least in part, distinct. Finally, glr2-1 does not affect ethanol repression, suggesting that in H. polymorpha the two repressing circuits are separated.  相似文献   

15.
The cytochromes c of fungi and higher plants contain one or two residues of epsilon-N-trimethyllysine, whose biological role is unknown. A cytochrome c-specific S-adenosylmethionine:protein-sysine methyltransferase (methylase) activity was shown to be present in extracts of the bakers' yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and basic kinetic properties of this enzyme are described. The specific activity of the methylase was lower in extracts of cells grown under conditions of catabolite (glucose) repression or anaerobiosis where cytochrome c levels were low, compared with cells grown under derepressed conditions where cytochrome c levels were high. During anaerobic-to-aerobic adaptation, the methylase was induced in parallel with cytochrome c, thus suggesting that the syntheses of cytochrome c and cytochrome c methylase are coordinately regulated. None of the cyc strains surveyed (cyc1, cyc2, cyc3, cyc4, cyc5, and cyc6) had diminished levels of methylase, although some of them were completely or almost completely deficient in cytochrome c.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Mutants were investigated that had elevated hexokinase activity and had been isolated previously as resistant to carbon catabolite repression (Zimmermann and Scheel 1977). They were allele tested with mutant strains of Lobo and Maitra (1977), which had defects in one or more of the genes coding for glucokinase and unspecific hexokinases. It was shown, that the mutation abolishing carbon catabolite repression had occured in a gene that was not allelic to any of the structural genes coding for hexokinases. This indicated that a regulatory defect was responsible for elevated hexokinase activity. This agreed with observations that hexokinase activities were like wild-type during growth on non-fermentable carbon sources in hex2 mutants. Recombination between the mutant allele hex2 and mutant alleles hxk1 and hxk2, coding for hexokinase PI and PII respectively, clearly demonstrated that only hexokinase PII was elevated in hex2 mutants. When hex2 mutant cells grown on YEP ethanol were shifted to YEP glucose media, hexokinase activity increased after 30min. This increase depended on de novo protein synthesis. hex2 mutants provide evidence, that carbon catabolite repression and synthesis of hexokinase PII are under common regulatory control.  相似文献   

17.
18.
R. B. Walsh  D. Clifton  J. Horak    D. G. Fraenkel 《Genetics》1991,128(3):521-527
A congenic series of Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains has been constructed which carry, in all combinations, null mutations in the three genes for glucose phosphorylation: HXK1, HXK2 and GLK1, coding hexokinase 1 (also called PI or A), hexokinase 2 (PII or B), and glucokinase, respectively: i.e., eight strains, all of which grow on glucose except for the triple mutant. All or several of the strains were characterized in their steady state batch growth with 0.2% or 2% glucose, in aerobic as well as respiration-inhibited conditions, with respect to growth rate, yield, and ethanol formation. Glucose flux values were generally similar for different strains and conditions, provided they contained either hexokinase 1 or hexokinase 2. And their aerobic growth, as known for wild type, was largely fermentative with ca. 1.5 mol ethanol made per mol glucose used. The strain lacking both hexokinases and containing glucokinase was an exception in having reduced flux, a result fitting with its maximal rate of glucose phosphorylation in vitro. Aerobic growth of even the latter strain was largely fermentative (ca. 1 mol ethanol per mol glucose). Invertase expression was determined for a variety of media. All strains with HXK2 showed repression in growth on glucose and the others did not. Derepression in the wild-type strain occurred at ca. 1 mM glucose. The metabolic data do not support- or disprove-a model with HXK2 having only a secondary role in catabolite repression related to more rapid metabolism.  相似文献   

19.
The serine/threonine kinase Akt inhibits mitochondrial cytochrome c release and apoptosis induced by a variety of proapoptotic stimuli. The antiapoptotic activity of Akt is coupled, at least in part, to its effects on cellular metabolism. Here, we provide genetic evidence that Akt is required to maintain hexokinase association with mitochondria. Targeted disruption of this association impairs the ability of growth factors and Akt to inhibit cytochrome c release and apoptosis. Targeted disruption of mitochondria-hexokinase (HK) interaction or exposure to proapoptotic stimuli that promote rapid dissociation of hexokinase from mitochondria potently induce cytochrome c release and apoptosis, even in the absence of Bax and Bak. These effects are inhibited by activated Akt, but not by Bcl-2, implying that changes in outer mitochondrial membrane (OMM) permeability leading to apoptosis can occur in the absence of Bax and Bak and that Akt inhibits these changes through maintenance of hexokinase association with mitochondria.  相似文献   

20.
The DNA segments containing the ADR1 gene and a mutant allele, ADR1-5c, have been isolated by complementation of function in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The ADR1 gene is required for synthesis of the glucose-repressible alcohol dehydrogenase (ADHII) when S. cerevisiae cells are grown on a nonfermentable carbon source, whereas the ADR1-5c allele allows ADHII synthesis even during glucose repression. A plasmid pool consisting of yeast DNA fragments isolated from a strain carrying the ADR1-5c allele was used to transform a strain containing the adr1-1 allele, which prevents ADHII depression. Transformants were isolated which expressed ADHII during glucose repression. A plasmid isolated from one of these transformants was shown to carry the ADR1-5c allele by its ability to integrate at the chromosomal adr1-1 locus. The wild-type ADR1 gene was isolated by colony hybridization, using the cloned ADR1-5c gene as a probe. The ADR1-5c and ADR1 DNA segments were indistinguishable by restriction site mapping. A partial ADR1 phenotype could be conferred by a 1.9-kilobase region, but DNA outside of this region appeared to be necessary for normal activation of ADHII by the ADR1 gene.  相似文献   

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