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1.
Mating type a cells of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae produce a mating hormone, the a-factor, that we have previously characterized as a very hydrophobic, modified dodecapeptide (Betz, R., Crabb, J. W., Meyer, H. E., Wittig, R., and Duntze, W. (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 546-548). We have investigated the molecular structure in detail using mass spectrometry and proton NMR spectrometry of the intact hormone and authentic component molecules. Tandem mass spectrometry confirms the previously determined peptide sequence of the hormone and shows that it contains additional structural components with masses of 205 and 15 daltons. These were identified by proton NMR and mass spectrometry as a farnesyl (C15H25) residue and a terminal methyl ester group. The farnesyl moiety is attached to the sulfur atom of the carboxyl-terminal cysteine residue, as revealed by NMR of synthetic S-farnesyl cysteine methyl ester. The stereochemical configuration of the farnesyl moiety was determined to be trans,trans by comparison of gas chromatography retention times, mass spectra, and NMR spectra with those of standards. These results define the structure of a-factor as: (Sequence: see text). Replacement of the farnesyl by a methyl group leads to a partial reduction in specific biological activity of the a-factor, whereas hydrolysis of the carboxyl-terminal methyl ester causes a complete loss of activity.  相似文献   

2.
Temperature-sensitive mutations that produce insensitivity to division arrest by alpha-factor, a mating pheromone, were isolated in an MATa strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and shown by complementation studies to difine eight genes. All of these mutations (designated ste) produce sterility at the restrictive temperature in MATa cells, and mutations in seven of the genes produce sterility in MAT alpha cells. In no case was the sterility associated with these mutations coorectible by including wild-type cells of the same mating type in the mating test nor did nay of the mutants inhibit mating of the wild-type cells; the defect appears to be intrinsic to the cell for mutations in each of the genes. Apparently, none of the mutants is defective exclusively in division arrest by alpha-factor, as the sterility of none is suppressed by a temperature-sensitive cdc 28 mutation (the latter imposes division arrest at the correct cell cycle stage for mating). The mutants were examined for features that are inducible in MATa cells by alpha-factor (agglutinin synthesis as well as division arrest) and for the characteristics that constitutively distinguish MATa from MAT alpha cells (a-factor production, alpha-factor destruction). ste2 Mutants are defective specifically in the two inducible properties, whereas ste4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 11, and 12 mutants are defective, to varying degrees, in constitutive as well as inducible aspects. Mutations in ste8 and 9 assume a polar budding pattern unlike either MATa or MAT alpha cells but characteristic of MATa/alpha cells. This study defines seven genes that function in two cell types (MATa and alpha) to control the differentiation of cell type and one gene, ste2, that functions exclusively in MATa cells to mediate responsiveness to polypeptide hormone.  相似文献   

3.
《The Journal of cell biology》1996,135(6):1727-1739
During conjugation, two yeast cells fuse to form a single zygote. Cell fusion requires extensive remodeling of the cell wall, both to form a seal between the two cells and to remove the intervening material. The two plasma membranes then fuse to produce a continuous cytoplasm. We report the characterization of two cell fusion defective (Fus-) mutants, fus5 and fus8, isolated previously in our laboratory. Fluorescence and electron microscopy demonstrated that the fus5 and fus8 mutant zygotes were defective for cell wall remodeling/removal but not plasma membrane fusion. Strikingly, fus5 and fus8 were a specific; both mutations caused the mutant phenotype when present in the MATa parent but not in the MAT alpha parent. Consistent with an a-specific defect, the fus5 and fus8 mutants produced less a-factor than the isogenic wild-type strain. FUS5 and FUS8 were determined to be allelic to AXL1 and RAM1, respectively, two genes known to be required for biogenesis of a-factor. Several experiments demonstrated that the partial defect in a-factor production resulted in the Fus- phenotype. First, overexpression of a-factor in the fus mutants suppressed the Fus- defect. Second, matings to an MAT alpha partner supersensitive to mating pheromone (sst2 delta) suppressed the Fus- defect in trans. Finally, the gene encoding a-factor, MFA1, was placed under the control of a repressible promoter; reduced levels of wild-type a-factor caused an identical cell fusion defect during mating. We conclude that high levels of pheromone are required as one component of the signal for prezygotes to initiate cell fusion.  相似文献   

4.
During conjugation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, two cells of opposite mating type (MATa and MAT alpha) fuse to form a diploid zygote. Conjugation requires that each cell locate an appropriate mating partner. To investigate how yeast cells select a mating partner, we developed a competition mating assay in which wild-type MAT alpha cells have a choice of two MATa cell mating partners. We first demonstrated that sterile MAT alpha 1 cells (expressing no a- or alpha-specific gene products) do not compete with fertile MATa cells in the assay; hence, wild-type MATa and MAT alpha cells can efficiently locate an appropriate mating partner. Second, we showed that a MATa strain need not be fertile to compete with a fertile MATa strain in the assay. This result defines an early step in conjugation, which we term courtship. We showed that the ability to agglutinate is not necessary in MATa cells for courtship but that production of a-pheromone and response to alpha-pheromone are necessary. Thus, MATa cells must not only transmit but must also receive and then respond to information for effective courtship; hence, there is a "conversation" between the courting cells. We showed that the only alpha-pheromone-induced response necessary in MATa cells for courtship is production of a-pheromone. In all cases tested, a strain producing a higher level of a-pheromone was more proficient in courtship than one producing a lower level. We propose that during courtship, a MAT alpha cell selects the adjacent MATa cell producing the highest level of a-pheromone.  相似文献   

5.
《The Journal of cell biology》1993,120(5):1203-1215
STE6 gene product is required for secretion of the lipopeptide mating pheromone a-factor by Saccharomyces cerevisiae MATa cells. Radiolabeling and immunoprecipitation, either with specific polyclonal antibodies raised against a TrpE-Ste6 fusion protein or with mAbs that recognize c-myc epitopes in fully functional epitope-tagged Ste6 derivatives, demonstrated that Ste6 is a 145-kD phosphoprotein. Subcellular fractionation, various extraction procedures, and immunoblotting showed that Ste6 is an intrinsic plasma membrane- associated protein. The apparent molecular weight of Ste6 was unaffected by tunicamycin treatment, and the radiolabeled protein did not bind to concanavalin A, indicating that Ste6 is not glycosylated and that glycosylation is not required either for its membrane delivery or its function. The amino acid sequence of Ste6 predicts two ATP- binding folds; correspondingly, Ste6 was photoaffinity-labeled specifically with 8-azido-[alpha-32P]ATP. Indirect immunofluorescence revealed that in exponentially growing MATa cells, the majority of Ste6 showed a patchy distribution within the plasma membrane, but a significant fraction was found concentrated in a number of vesicle-like bodies subtending the plasma membrane. In contrast, in MATa cells exposed to the mating pheromone alpha-factor, which markedly induced Ste6 production, the majority of Ste6 was incorporated into the plasma membrane within the growing tip of the elongating cells. The highly localized insertion of this transporter may establish pronounced anisotropy in a-factor secretion from the MATa cell, and thereby may contribute to the establishment of the cell polarity which restricts partner selection and cell fusion during mating to one MAT alpha cell.  相似文献   

6.
Previous biochemical investigations on the Saccharomyces cerevisiae a-factor indicated that this lipopeptide pheromone [YIIKGVFWDPAC(farnesyl)OMe] might adopt a type II beta-turn at positions 4 and 5 of the peptide sequence. To test this hypothesis, we synthesized five analogs of a-factor, in which residues at positions 4 and 5 were replaced with: L-Pro4(I); D-Pro4(II); L-Pro4-D-Ala5(III); D-Pro4-L-Ala5(IV); or Nle4(V). Analogs were purified to > 99% homogeneity as evidenced by HPLC and TLC and were characterized by mass spectrometry and amino acid analysis. Using a growth arrest assay the conformationally restricted a-factor analogs I and III were found to be almost 50-fold more active than the diastereometric homologs II and IV and were equally active to wild-type a-factor. Replacement of Lys4 with the isosteric Nle4 almost abolished the activity of the pheromone. Thus, the incorporation of residues that promote a type II beta-turn compensated for the loss of the favorable contribution of the Lys4 side chain to pheromone activity. CD spectra on these peptides suggested that they were essentially disordered in both TFE/H2O and in the presence of DMPC vesicles. There was no correlation between CD peak shape and biological activity. Using fluorescence spectroscopy we measured the interaction of lipid vesicles with these position 4 and 5 analogs as well as with three a-factor analogs with a modified farnesyl group. The results indicated that modifications of both the peptide sequence and the lipid moiety affect partitioning into lipid, and that no correlation existed between the propensity of a pheromone to partition into the lipid and its biological activity.  相似文献   

7.
A new gene involved in error-prone repair of ultraviolet (UV) damage has been identified in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by the mms3-1 mutation. UV-induced reversion is reduced in diploids that are homozygous for mms3-1, only if they are also heterozygous (MATa/MAT alpha) at the mating type locus. The mms3-1 mutation has no effect on UV-induced reversion either in haploids or MATa/MATa or MAT alpha/MAT alpha diploids. The mutation confers sensitivity to UV and methyl methane sulfonate in both haploids and diploids. Even though mutation induction by UV is restored to wild-type levels in MATa/MATa mms3-1/mms3-1 or MAT alpha/MAT alpha mms3-1/mms3-1 diploids, such strains still retain sensitivity to the lethal effects of UV. Survival after UV irradiation in mms3-1 rad double mutant combinations indicates that mms3-1 is epistatic to rad6-1 whereas non-epistatic interactions are observed with rad3 and rad52 mutants. When present in the homozygous state in MATa/MAT alpha his1-1/his1-315 heteroallelic diploids, mms3-1 was found to lower UV-induced mitotic recombination.  相似文献   

8.
The structure of transposable yeast mating type loci   总被引:133,自引:0,他引:133  
K A Nasmyth  K Tatchell 《Cell》1980,19(3):753-764
A recombinant plasmid containing a MAT alpha mating type locus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been isolated by its ability to complement a sterile mat alpha mutation. The plasmid hybridizes to restriction fragments containing both active mating type loci (MATa and MAT alpha) and both silent mating type loci (HMRa and HML alpha). All loci therefore have common sequences. Recombinant lambda clones of the locihave been isolated by plaque hybridization and their structures have been compared by a heteroduplex analysis. At its center, each locus contains one of two apparently nonhomologous sequences. Loci concerned with the alpha phenotype (MAT alpha and HML alpha) contain and 850 bp alpha-specific sequence, whereas loci concerned with the a phenotype (MATa and HMRa) contain a 700 bp a-specific sequence. The a- or alpha-specific sequences are surrounded by DNA sequences that are common to all loci. These homologous sequences extend for 230 bp on the left and 700 bp on the right. They appear to be unrelated to each other. Surprisingly, HML alpha and HMRa differ in their extent of homology to MATa and MAT alpha outside the above regions. HMRa lacks an extensive (700 bp) DNA sequence to the right of the large right-hand homologous region, and possibly also a small (90 bp) sequence to the left of the small left-hand homologous region, both of which are present at HML alpha, MATa and MAT alpha. Hybridization studies have shown that the 700 bp sequence is present at HMLa but absent at HMR alpha alleles. It is therefore characteristic of HML, irrespective of whether it contains a- or alpha-specific sequences. The results imply that mating type interconversion is effected by transposition of DNA sequences from HML or HMR to MAT, as predicted by the controlling element model of Oshima and Takano (1971) and the Cassette model of Hicks, Strathern and Herskowitz (1977).  相似文献   

9.
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae pheromone a-factor is produced by a cells and interacts with alpha cells to cause cell cycle arrest and other physiological responses associated with mating. Two a-factor structural genes, MFA1 and MFA2, have been previously cloned with synthetic probes based on the a-factor amino acid sequence (A. Brake, C. Brenner, R. Najarian, P. Laybourn, and J. Merryweather, cited in M.-J. Gething [ed.], Protein transport and secretion, 1985). We have examined the function of these genes in a-factor production and mating by construction and analysis of chromosomal null mutations. mfa1 and mfa2 single mutants each exhibited approximately half the wild-type level of a-factor activity and were proficient in mating, whereas the mfa1 mfa2 double mutant produced no a-factor and was unable to mate. These results demonstrate that both genes are functional, that each gene makes an equivalent contribution to the a-factor activity and mating capacity of a cells, and that a-factor plays an essential role in mating. Strikingly, exogenous a-factor did not alleviate the mating defect of the double mutant, suggesting that an a cell must be producing a-factor to be an effective mating partner.  相似文献   

10.
Haber JE  George JP 《Genetics》1979,93(1):13-35
Studies of heterothallic and homothallic strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae have led to the suggestion that mating-type information is located at three distinct sites on chromosome 3, although only information at the mating-type (MAT) locus is expressed (Hicks, Strathern and Herskowitz, 1977). We have found that the recessive mutation cmt permits expression of the normally silent copies of mating-type information at the HMa and HM alpha loci. In haploid strains carrying HMa and HM alpha, the cmt mutation allows the simultaneous expression of both a and alpha information, leading to a nonmating ("MATa/MAT alpha") phenotype. The effects of cmt can be masked by changing the mating-type information at HMa or HM alpha. For example, a cell of genotype MATa hma HM alpha cmt has an a mating type, while a MAT alpha hma HM alpha cmt strain is nonmating. Expression of mating-type information at the HM loci can correct the mating and sporulation defects of the mata* and mat alpha 10 alleles. Meiotic segregants recovered from cmt/cmt diploids carrying the mat mutations demonstrate that these mutants are not "healed" to normal MAT alleles, as is the case in parallel studies using the homothallism gene HO.--All of the results are consistent with the notion that the HMa and hm alpha alleles both code for alpha information, while HM alpha and hma both code for a information. The cmt mutation demonstrates that these normally silent copies of mating-type and sporulation information can be expressed and that the information at these loci is functionally equivalent to that found at MAT. The cmt mutation does not cause interconversions of mating-type alleles at MAT, and it is not genetically linked to MAT, HMa, HM alpha or HO. In cmt heterozygotes, cmt becomes homozygous at a frequency greater than 1% when the genotype at the MAT locus is mata*/MAT alpha or mat alpha 10/MATa.  相似文献   

11.
In homothallic cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a or alpha mating type information at the mating type locus (MAT) is replaced by the transposition of the opposite mating type allele from HML alpha or HMRa. The rad52-1 mutation, which reduces mitotic and abolishes meiotic recombination, also affects homothallic switching (Malone and Esposito, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 77:503-507, 1980). We have found that both HO rad52 MATa and HO rad52 MAT alpha cells die. This lethality is suppressed by mutations that substantially reduce but do not eliminate homothallic conversions. These mutations map at or near the MAT locus (MAT alpha inc, MATa-inc, MATa stk1) or are unlinked to MAT (HO-1 and swi1). These results suggest that the switching event itself is involved in the lethality. With the exception of swi1, HO rad52 strains carrying one of the above mutations cannot convert mating type at all. MAT alpha rad52 HO swi1 strains apparently can switch MAT alpha to MATa. However, when we analyzed these a maters, we found that few, if any, of them were bona fide MATa cells. These a-like cells were instead either deleted for part of chromosome III distal to and including MAT or had lost the entire third chromosome. Approximately 30% of the time, an a-like cell could be repaired to a normal MATa genotype if the cell was mated to a RAD52 MAT alpha-inc strain. The effects of rad52 were also studied in mata/MAT alpha-inc rad52/rad52 ho/HO diploids. When this diploid attempted to switch mata to MATa, an unstable broken chromosome was generated in nearly every cell. These studies suggest that homothallic switching involves the formation of a double-stranded deoxyribonucleic acid break or a structure which is labile in rad52 cells and results in a broken chromosome. We propose that the production of a double-stranded deoxyribonucleic acid break is the lethal event in rad52 HO cells.  相似文献   

12.
《The Journal of cell biology》1983,96(6):1592-1600
Two mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae have been isolated from normal haploid MAT alpha strains and characterized as having temperature- sensitive, pleiotropic phenotypes for functions associated with mating. At the permissive temperature, 23 degrees C, they were found to behave as normal MAT alpha haploids with respect to mating efficiency, sporulation in diploids formed with MAT a strains, secretion of alpha- factor, and failure to secrete the MATa-specific products, a-factor and Barrier. At higher temperatures they were found to decline in mating and sporulation efficiency and to express the a-specific functions. Genetic analysis established that one of these mutants, PE34, carries a temperature-sensitive allele of the MAT alpha 2 gene and that the other, PD7, carries a temperature-sensitive allele of the TUP1 gene.  相似文献   

13.
The solution phase synthesis of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae a-mating factor and nonfarnesylated and nonmethylated a-factor analogs are reported. The a-factor, a lipopeptide with the sequence Tyr-Ile-Ile-Lys-Gly-Val-Phe-Trp-Asp-Pro-Ala-Cys(S-Farnesyl)OCH3 was synthesized by the condensation of the amine terminal protected decapeptide with the carboxyl terminal farnesylated dipeptide using benzotriazol-l-yloxy-tris-(dimethylamino)-phosphonium hexafluorophosphate (BOP reagent) as the coupling agent. The synthesis of the decapeptide involved 5 + 5 fragment coupling with the BOP reagent and the successful application of 9-fluorenylmethyl ester(OFm) and 9-fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl(Fmoc) groups for the protection of Asp and Lys side chains and Tyr alpha-amine and of phenacyl esters (OPa) for alpha-carboxyl protection. The OFm and Fmoc groups tolerated repeated couplings and were completely stable to zinc powder in acetic acid, a condition under which the OPa group was removed. The synthesis of the nonfarnesylated alpha-factor was accomplished by the coupling of the decapeptide with tetrapeptide (Ala-CysOCH3)2 followed by the deprotection of the OFm and Fmoc groups with piperidine and the cleavage of the disulfide bond with zinc powder in acetic acid. The nonmethylated a-factor was prepared by 10 + 2 fragment coupling using OFm protection of the dipeptide carboxyl group followed by removal of all protecting groups with piperidine. Attempts to saponify a-factor were not successful. The synthetic nonfarnesylated and nonmethylated a-mating pheromones were 100-1000 times less active than the a-factor, indicating that although the methyl ester and the farnesyl group are not essential for biological activity, they are necessary for high potency.  相似文献   

14.
The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae exhibits two mating types, a and alpha. Efficient mating of a and alpha cells requires the action of peptide pheromones secreted by each cell type. For example, a cells secrete a-factor, which alters the physiology of alpha cells, thereby preparing those cells for mating. To investigate the mechanism by which the pheromones act on the target cells, we have examined the effect of a-factor on expression of the STE3 gene, a gene which is required for mating by alpha cells and which is expressed only in alpha cells. We have monitored STE3 expression by two assays: RNA production from the chromosomal STE3 locus and beta-galactosidase activity produced from a plasmid-borne STE3-lacZ gene fusion. By both assays we show that a-factor induces a rapid increase in STE3 expression. Induction of STE3 RNA occurs even if protein synthesis is blocked by cycloheximide. Using temperature-sensitive cell division cycle mutants, we have also shown that induction occurs in cells arrested at several discrete positions in the cell cycle. These results demonstrate (1) that induction of STE3 expression by a-factor is a primary response to the pheromone, and (2) that alpha cells are capable of responding to a-factor regardless of their position in the cell cycle.  相似文献   

15.
Analysis of Y-Linked Mutations to Male Sterility in DROSOPHILA MELANOGASTER   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1  
Kennison JA 《Genetics》1983,103(2):219-234
Mating type in haploid cells of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is determined by a pair of alleles MATa and MAT alpha. Under various conditions haploid mating types can be interconverted. It has been proposed that transpositions of silent cassettes of mating-type information from HML OR HMR to MAT are the source of mating type conversions. A mutation described in this work, designated AON1, has the following properties. (1) MAT alpha cells carring AON1 are defective in mating. (2) AON1 allows MAT alpha/MAT alpha but not MATa/MATa diploids to sporulate; thus, AON1 mimics the MATa requirement for sporulation. (3) mata-1 cells that carry AON1 are MATa phenocopies, i.e., MAT alpha/mata-1 AON1 diploids behave as standard MAT alpha/MATa cells; therefore, AON1 suppresses the defect of mata-1. (4) AON1 maps at or near HMRa. (5) Same-site revertants from AON1 lose the ability to convert mating type to MATa, indicating that reversion is associated with the loss of a functional HMRa locus. In addition, AON1 is a dominant mutation. We conclude that AON1 is a regulatory mutation, probably cis-acting, that leads to the constitutive expression of silent a mating-type information located at HMRa.  相似文献   

16.
Tetrad analysis of MATa/MAT alpha diploids of Saccharomyces cerevisiae generally yields 2 MATa:2MAT alpha meiotic products. About 1 to 1.8% of the tetrads yield aberrant segregations for this marker. Described here are experiments that determine whether the aberrant meiotic segregations at the mating-type locus are ascribable to gene conversions or to MAT switches, that is, to mating-type interconversions. Diploid strains incapable of switching MATa to MAT alpha, or the converse, nevertheless display changes of MATa to MAT alpha, or the reverse. These events must be attributed to gene conversion. Further, we suggest that MATa and MAT alpha alleles may represent nonhomologous sequences of DNA since they fail to display postmeiotic segregations.  相似文献   

17.
18.
19.
Homothallic switching of yeast mating type genes occurs as often as each cell division, so that a colony derived from a single haploid spore soon contains an equal number of MATa and MAT alpha cells. Cells of opposite mating types conjugate, and eventually the colony contains only nonmating MATa/MAT alpha diploids. Mutations that reduce the efficiency of homothallic MAT conversions yield colonies that still contain many haploid cells of the original spore mating type plus a few recently generated cells of the opposite mating type. These (a greater than alpha)- or (alpha greater than a)-mating colonies also contain some nonmating diploid cells. As an alternative to microscopic pedigree analysis to determine the frequency of mating type conversions in a variety of mutant homothallic strains, we analyzed the proportions of MATa, MAT alpha, and MATa/MAT alpha cells in a colony by examining the mating phenotypes of subclones. We developed a mathematical model that described the proportion of cell types in a slow-switching colony. This model predicted that the proportion of nonmating cells would continually increase with the size (age) of a colony derived from a single cell. This prediction was confirmed by determining the proportion of cell types in colonies of an HO swi1 strain that was grown for different numbers of cell divisions. Data from subcloning (a greater than alpha) and (alpha greater than a) colonies from a variety of slow-switching mutations and chromosomal rearrangements were used to calculate the frequency of MAT conversions in these strains.  相似文献   

20.
A mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae representing a novel life cycle, named "alternative self-diploidization" or "ASD" homothallism, was obtained fortuitously. In this life cycle, MAT alpha (or MATa) haplophase and MAT alpha/MAT alpha (or MATa/MATa) diplophase alternate. Germinated cells are haploid and mating. They soon become nonmating and sporogenous as they vegetatively grow. They sooner or later diploidize presumably via endomitosis. The diploid cells haploidize via normal meiosis. A single recessive nuclear mutation, named asd 1-1, is responsible for "ASD" homothallism. In the rho 0 cytoplasm, asd 1-1 cells mate even if at a low efficiency and fail to diploidize. Since pet mutations do not have such effects, we conclude that a certain mitochondrial function other than respiration is required for manifestation of "ASD" homothallism. That is, "ASD" homothallism is the result of some sort of nuclear-cytoplasmic interaction.  相似文献   

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