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1.
Yeast cells secrete a variety of glycosylated proteins. At least two of these proteins, invertase and acid phosphatase, fail to be secreted in a new class of mutants that are temperature-sensitive for growth. Unlike the yeast secretory mutants previously described (class A sec mutants; Novick, P., C. Field, and R. Schekman, 1980, Cell., 21:205-420), class B sec mutants (sec 53, sec 59) fail to produce active secretory enzymes at the restrictive temperature (37 degrees C). sec 53 and sec 59 appear to be defective in reactions associated with the endoplasmic reticulum. Although protein synthesis continues at a nearly normal rate for 2 h at 37 degrees C, incorporation of [3H]mannose into glycoprotein is reduced. Immunoreactive polypeptide forms of invertase accumulate within the cell which have mobilities on SDS PAGE consistent with incomplete glycosylation: sec 53 produces little or no glycosylated invertase, and sec 59 accumulates forms containing 0-3 of the 9-10 N-linked oligosaccharide chains that are normally added to the protein. In addition to secreted enzymes, maturation of the vacuolar glycoprotein carboxypeptidase Y, incorporation of the plasma membrane sulfate permease activity, and secretion of the major cell wall proteins are blocked at 37 degrees C.  相似文献   

2.
Immunoelectron microscopy of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells embedded in Lowicryl K4M has been used to localize invertase and plasma membrane (PM) ATPase in secretory organelles. sec mutant cells incubated at 37 degrees C were prepared for electron microscopy, and thin sections were incubated with polyclonal antibodies, followed by decoration with protein A-gold. Specific labeling of invertase was seen in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, and secretory vesicles in mutant cells that exaggerate these organelles. PM ATPase accumulated within the same organelles. Double-immune labeling revealed that invertase and PM ATPase colocalized in secretory vesicles. These results strengthen the view that secretion and plasma membrane assembly are biosynthetically coupled in yeast.  相似文献   

3.
Defective plasma membrane assembly in yeast secretory mutants.   总被引:11,自引:2,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
Yeast mutants that are conditionally blocked at distinctive steps in secretion and export of cell surface proteins have been used to monitor assembly of integral plasma membrane proteins. Mutants blocked in transport from the endoplasmic reticulum (sec18), from the Golgi body (sec7 and sec14), and in transport of secretory vesicles (sec1) show dramatically reduced assembly of galactose and arginine permease activities. Simultaneous induction of galactose permease and alpha-galactosidase (a secreted glycoprotein) in sec mutant cells at the nonpermissive temperature (37 degrees C) shows that both activities accumulate and can be exported coordinately when cells are returned to the permissive temperature (24 degrees C) in the presence or absence of cycloheximide. Plasma membrane fractions isolated from sec mutant cells radiolabeled at 37 degrees C have been analyzed by two-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis. Although most of the major protein species seen in plasma membranes from wild-type cells are not efficiently localized in sec18 or sec7, several of these proteins appear in plasma membranes from sec1 cells. These results may be explained by contamination of plasma membrane fractions with precursor vesicles that accumulate in sec1 cells. Alternatively, some proteins may branch off during transport along the secretory pathway and be inserted into the plasma membrane by a different mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
New thermosensitive mutants of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae which block the secretion of periplasmic enzymes at restriction temperature have been obtained. These mutants accumulate active low molecular weight and mature invertase species in the cell; the buoyant density of the cells in a Percoll gradient is higher than that in the wild strain cells. The mutant cells transferred to permissive temperature (25 degrees C) in the absence of protein synthesis can secrete some amount of accumulated invertase. It was found that the secretory defects of conditional mutants do not affect the activity of cytoplasmic enzymes (e.g., alcohol dehydrogenase) or the level of total protein synthesis and glycosylation and do not induce non-specific disturbances in energy metabolism and plasma membrane functions at restriction temperature. Some strains of new secretory mutants revealed uncoupled defective secretion of periplasmic enzymes and intrinsic membrane proteins (proline permease). The possibility of branching of the secretory pathway for periplasmic enzymes and cytoplasmic membrane proteins is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
The sequence of posttranslational events in the export of yeast glycoproteins has been determined with the aid of mutants that affect the secretory apparatus. Temperature-sensitive secretory mutants (sec) of S. cerevisiae, when incubated at a nonpermissive growth temperature (37°C), accumulate intracellular precursor forms of exported glycoproteins, such as invertase, and expand or amplify one or more of three different secretory organelles. Characterization of haploid double-sec-mutant strains, with regard to the structure of the accumulated invertase and the morphology of the exaggerated organelles, allows assessment of the order in which the gene products are required, the sequence of invertase maturation steps and a pathway of secretory organelles. The transitions from one organelle to the next require energy and sec gene products. One of the mutants (sec7) accumulates a different organelle depending on the concentration of glucose in the medium. In normal growth medium (2% glucose), a thermally irreversible structure, the Berkeley body, predominates; in low glucose (0.1%), Golgi structures accumulate thermoreversibly. The results are consistent with the following model. Secretory proteins enter the ER, where the initial steps of glycosylation occur. Nine or more sec gene products and energy are required to transfer material to a Golgi-like structure, where further glycosylation occurs. Two or more functions and energy are required to package nearly fully glycosylated proteins into vesicles that are then transported into the bud, where they fuse with the plasma membrane in a process that requires at least ten additional gene products and energy.  相似文献   

6.
Permissive and restrictive phenotypes of two secretory mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, sec 1 and sec 18, were studied by freeze-fracture technique. The sec 1 mutant, in addition to accumulating secretory vesicles, was characterized by a disappearance of the plasma membrane invaginations and by an aggregation of intra-membrane particles in vacuolar membranes. A prolonged incubation of the cells at 37 degrees C led to pathological fusion of some vesicles with the plasma membrane. After the cells were transferred back to the permissive temperature the invaginations reappeared rapidly while the accumulated vesicles disappeared only after budding had been resumed. The sec 18 mutant, apart from having distended endoplasmic reticulum membranes, also lost the plasma membrane invaginations at 37 degrees C and regained them at 24 degrees C. The described ultrastructural changes are typical for the restrictive phenotypes and represent further manifestations of the pleiotropic effect of the respective sec mutations.  相似文献   

7.
Temperature-sensitive secretory mutants (sec) of S. cerevisiae have been used to evaluate the organelles and cellular functions involved in transport of the vacuolar glycoprotein, carboxypeptidase Y (CPY). Others have shown that CPY (61 kd) is synthesized as an inactive proenzyme (69 kd) that is matured by cleavage of an 8 kd amino-terminal propeptide. sec mutants that are blocked in either of two early stages in the secretory process and accumulate endoplasmic reticulum or Golgi bodies also accumulate precursor forms of CPY when cells are incubated at the nonpermissive temperature (37°C). These forms are converted to a proper size when cells are returned to a permissive temperature (25°C). Vacuoles isolated from sec mutant cells do not contain the proCPY produced at 37°C. These results suggest that vacuolar and secretory glycoproteins require the same cellular functions for transport from the endoplasmic reticulum and from the Golgi body. The Golgi body represents a branch point in the pathway: from this organelle, vacuolar proenzymes are transported to the vacuole for proteolytic processing and secretory proteins are packaged into vesicles.  相似文献   

8.
Parallel secretory pathways to the cell surface in yeast   总被引:21,自引:7,他引:14       下载免费PDF全文
Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants that have a post-Golgi block in the exocytic pathway accumulate 100-nm vesicles carrying secretory enzymes as well as plasma membrane and cell-wall components. We have separated the vesicle markers into two groups by equilibrium isodensity centrifugation. The major population of vesicles contains Bg12p, an endoglucanase destined to be a cell-wall component, as well as Pma1p, the major plasma membrane ATPase. In addition, Snc1p, a synaptobrevin homologue, copurifies with these vesicles. Another vesicle population contains the periplasmic enzymes invertase and acid phosphatase. Both vesicle populations also contain exoglucanase activity; the major exoglucanase normally secreted from the cell, encoded by EXG1, is carried in the population containing periplasmic enzymes. Electron microscopy shows that both vesicle groups have an average diameter of 100 nm. The late secretory mutants sec1, sec4, and sec6 accumulate both vesicle populations, while neither is detected in wild-type cells, early sec mutants, or a sec13 sec6 double mutant. Moreover, a block in endocytosis does not prevent the accumulation of either vesicle species in an end4 sec6 double mutant, further indicating that both populations are of exocytic origin. The accumulation of two populations of late secretory vesicles indicates the existence of two parallel routes from the Golgi to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

9.
Yeast secretory mutants sec53 and sec59 define a posttranslational stage in the penetration of glycoprotein precursors into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In the previous report we showed that at the restrictive temperature (37 degrees C) these mutants accumulate enzymatically inactive and incompletely glycosylated forms of the secretory enzyme invertase and the vacuolar enzyme carboxypeptidase Y. Cell fractionation experiments reveal that these precursor forms remain firmly bound to the ER membrane. However, upon return to the permissive temperature (24 degrees C), the invertase precursors are glycosylated, become partially active, and are secreted. Thermoreversible conversion does not require protein synthesis, but does require energy. In contrast to the effect of these mutations, inhibition of oligosaccharide synthesis with tunicamycin at 37 degrees C causes irreversible accumulation of unglycosylated invertase. The effect of the drug is exaggerated by high temperature since unglycosylated invertase synthesized in the presence of tunicamycin at 25 degrees C is secreted. A portion of the invertase polypeptide accumulated at 37 degrees C is preserved when membranes from sec53 and sec59 are treated with trypsin. In the presence of Triton X-100 or saponin, the invertase is degraded completely. The protected fragment appears to represent a portion of the invertase polypeptide that is embedded in or firmly associated with the ER membrane. This association may develop early during the synthesis of invertase, so that in the absence of translocation, some of the completed polypeptide chain remains exposed on the cytoplasmic surface of the ER.  相似文献   

10.
Phospholipid synthesis activity and plasma membrane growth have been studied in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae temperature-sensitive, secretion-defective mutants isolated by Novick and Schekman (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76:1858-1862, 1979; Novick et al., Cell 21:205-215, 1980). The mutants, sec1 through sec23, do not grow at 37 degrees C and exhibit lower rates of phospholipid synthesis than does the wild-type strain X2180. None of the mutants exhibits a decline in lipid synthesis rapid enough to explain secretion failure. Plasma membrane growth was assessed indirectly by examining the osmotic sensitivity of spheroplasts derived from cultures transferred from 24 to 37 degrees C. Spheroplasts from the normal-growing strain X2180 exhibited a small rapid increase in osmotic sensitivity and stabilized at a more sensitive state. Spheroplasts from the sec mutants exposed to the same temperature shift exhibited progressively increasing osmotic sensitivity. Cycloheximide treatment prevented progressive increases in osmotic fragility. These data are compatible with the hypothesis that plasma membrane expansion is restricted in the sec mutants. During incubation at 37 degrees C, the accumulation of intracellular materials within the no-longer expanding plasma membrane exerts osmotic stress on the membrane, increasing with time. The gene products defective in Novick and Schekman's sec mutants appear to be required for both extracellular protein secretion and plasma membrane growth in yeast cells.  相似文献   

11.
The SEC14 gene encodes an essential phosphatidylinositol (PtdIns) transfer protein required for formation of Golgi-derived secretory vesicles in yeast. Suppressor mutations that rescue temperature-sensitive sec14 mutants provide an approach for determining the role of Sec14p in secretion. One suppressor, sac1-22, causes accumulation of PtdIns(4)P. SAC1 encodes a phosphatase that can hydrolyze PtdIns(4)P and certain other phosphoinositides. These findings suggest that PtdIns(4)P is limiting in sec14 cells and that elevation of PtdIns(4)P production can suppress the secretory defect. Correspondingly, we found that PtdIns(4)P levels were decreased significantly in sec14-3 mutants shifted to 37 degrees C and that sec14-3 cells could grow at an otherwise nonpermissive temperature (34 degrees C) when carrying a plasmid overexpressing PIK1, encoding one of two essential PtdIns 4-kinases. This effect is specific because overexpression of the other PtdIns 4-kinase gene (STT4) or a PtdIns 3-kinase gene (VPS34) did not rescue sec14-3 cells. To further address Pik1p function in secretion, two different pik1(ts) mutants were examined. Upon shift to restrictive temperature (37 degrees C), the PtdIns(4)P levels dropped by about 60% in both pik1(ts) strains within 1 h. During the same period, cells displayed a reduction (40-50%) in release of a secreted enzyme (invertase). However, similar treatment did not effect maturation of a vacuolar enzyme (carboxypeptidase Y). These findings indicate that, first, PtdIns(4)P limitation is a major contributing factor to the secretory defect in sec14 cells; second, Sec14p function is coupled to the action of Pik1p, and; third, PtdIns(4)P has an important role in the Golgi-to-plasma membrane stage of secretion.  相似文献   

12.
J H Rothman  T H Stevens 《Cell》1986,47(6):1041-1051
We have devised a genetic selection for mutant yeast cells that fail to properly deliver the vacuolar glycoprotein CPY to the lysosome-like vacuole. This has allowed us to identify mutations in eight VPL complementation groups that result in aberrant secretion of up to approximately 90% of the immunoreactive CPY. Other soluble vacuolar proteins are also affected by each vpl mutation, demonstrating that a sorting system for multiple vacuolar proteins exists in yeast. Mislocalized CPY apparently traverses late stages of the secretory pathway, since a vesicle-accumulating sec1 mutation prevents secretion of this protein. Despite the presence of abnormal membrane-enclosed organelles in some of the vpl mutants, maturation and secretion of invertase are not substantially perturbed. Thus vpl mutations define a new class of genes that encode products required for sorting of newly synthesized vacuolar proteins from secretory proteins during their transit through the yeast secretory pathway.  相似文献   

13.
SEC11 is required for signal peptide processing and yeast cell growth   总被引:26,自引:9,他引:17       下载免费PDF全文
Among the collection of temperature-sensitive secretion mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, sec11 mutant cells are uniquely defective in signal peptide processing of at least two different secretory proteins. At 37 degrees C, the restrictive growth temperature, sec11 cells accumulate core-glycosylated forms of invertase and acid phosphatase, each retaining an intact signal peptide. In contrast, other sec mutant strains in which transport of core-glycosylated molecules from the endoplasmic reticulum is blocked show no defect in signal peptide cleavage. A DNA fragment that complements the sec11-7 mutation has been cloned. Genetic analysis indicates that the complementing clone contains the authentic SEC11 gene, and that a null mutation at the SEC11 locus is lethal. The DNA sequence of SEC11 predicts a basic protein (estimated pI of 9.5) of 167 amino acids including an NH2-terminal hydrophobic region that may function as a signal and/or membrane anchor domain. One potential N-glycosylation site is found in the 18.8-kD (Sec 11p) predicted protein. The mass of the SEC11 protein is very close to that found for two of the subunits of the canine and hen oviduct signal peptidases. Furthermore, the chromatographic behavior of the hen oviduct enzyme indicates an overall basic charge comparable to the predicted pI of the Sec11p.  相似文献   

14.
Representative conditional yeast secretory mutants, blocked in transport of secretory and plasma membrane proteins from the endoplasmic reticulum (sec 18), from the Golgi body (sec 7) and in transport of secretory vesicles (sec 1), accumulated exoglucanase, a constitutive yeast activity, when incubated at the restrictive temperature (37°C). Different proportions of the accumulated activity were released by mutant cells under permissive conditions. The presence or absence of cycloheximide during the secretion period made no differences in the results. More than 90% of the internal activity was bound to membrane in wild type cells. However, only the soluble pool underwent changes during the accumulation or secretion periods. The bulk of secretory invertase accumulated by sec 1 was also soluble. By contrast sec 7 and sec 18 accumulated membrane-bound as well as soluble invertase forms and both were secreted in similar proportions in each mutant. More than 90% of the accumulated invertase was secreted at the permissive temperature in sec 18 cells. That percentage was significantly lower for exoglucanase (<65%). Concomitantly, invertase accumulated by this mutant exited from the cells with a lower half time (t 1/2=150 min). These results may be interpreted assuming that exoglucanase is exported by a passive flow of the soluble pool.Non-standard abbreviations p-NPG p-nitrophenyl--d-glucopyranoside - Con A concanavalin A - Tris tris(hydroxymethyl)-amino-methane  相似文献   

15.
The exocyst is a multiprotein complex that plays an important role in secretory vesicle targeting and docking at the plasma membrane. Here we report the identification and characterization of a new component of the exocyst, Exo84p, in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yeast cells depleted of Exo84p cannot survive. These cells are defective in invertase secretion and accumulate vesicles similar to those in the late sec mutants. Exo84p co-immunoprecipitates with the exocyst components, and a portion of the Exo84p co-sediments with the exocyst complex in velocity gradients. The assembly of Exo84p into the exocyst complex requires two other subunits, Sec5p and Sec10p. Exo84p interacts with both Sec5p and Sec10p in a two-hybrid assay. Overexpression of Exo84p selectively suppresses the temperature sensitivity of a sec5 mutant. Exo84p specifically localizes to the bud tip or mother/daughter connection, sites of polarized secretion in the yeast S. cerevisiae. Exo84p is mislocalized in a sec5 mutant. These studies suggest that Exo84p is an essential protein that plays an important role in polarized secretion.  相似文献   

16.
Yeast secretory mutant sec53 cells accumulate inactive secretory glycoprotein precursors that remain associated with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) at the restrictive temperature (37 degrees C). The possibility that precursor polypeptides fail to penetrate completely into the ER lumen was tested by examining the protease accessibility of accumulated invertase, mating pheromone precursor prepro-alpha-factor and the vacuolar protein precursor procarboxypeptidase Y in cell lysates. In all three cases, the secretory protein precursors are protected from the action of exogenous protease unless the membrane is permeabilized by including Triton X-100 or saponin in the incubation. These results suggest that the sec53 defect allows complete polypeptide translocation. Consistent with this interpretation, the precursor of invertase accumulates in a signal peptide-processed form. In addition, invertase and prepro-alpha-factor precursors contain a small amount of possibly aberrant carbohydrate. In mutant cells or in wild type cells treated with tunicamycin, a 10-kDa fragment of the N terminus of mature invertase assumes a conformation that is resistant to trypsin with or without detergent. This domain may be associated with an ER protein or may simply assume an unusual conformation as a consequence of deficient glycosyl modification.  相似文献   

17.
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutant strains blocked in the protein secretion pathway are not able to induce sexual aggregation. We have utilized the defect of aggregation to concentrate the secretion-deficient cells and identified a new gene which functions in the process of intracellular protein transport. The new mutant, uso1, is temperature sensitive for growth and protein secretion. At the restrictive temperature (37 degrees C), uso1 mutant accumulated the core-glycosylated precursor form of the exported protein invertase in the cells. Ultrastructural study of the mutant fixed by the freeze-substitution method revealed expansion of the nuclear envelope lumen and accumulation of the ER at the restrictive temperature. Abnormally oriented bundles of microtubules were often found in the nucleus. The USO1 gene was cloned by complementation of the uso1 temperature-sensitive growth defect. DNA sequence analysis revealed a hydrophilic protein of 1790 amino acids with a COOH-terminal 1,100-amino acid-long alpha-helical structure characteristic of the coiled-coil rod region of the cytoskeleton-related proteins. These observations suggest that Uso1 protein plays a role as a cytoskeletal component in the protein transport from the ER to the later secretory compartments.  相似文献   

18.
A temperature-sensitive mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae (DAM303) is described that exhibits an early defect in lipid biosynthesis at the restrictive growth temperature, 37 degrees C. This strain rapidly lost viability after 1 h of incubation at 37 degrees C, and this was accompanied by a significantly reduced incorporation of 32Pi into cellular lipid and an accumulation of [1-14C]acetate into the free fatty acid fraction. The temperature-sensitive DAM303 mutation failed to complement the sec13 mutation described by Novick et al. (Cell 21:205-215, 1980), and from analysis of invertase secretion in the temperature-sensitive DAM303 strain, it is clear that the loss of invertase secretion in the mutant occurs after the loss of phospholipid synthesis. Although the precise nature of the temperature-sensitive lesion in the DAM303 strain has still to be identified, the results from the study of this mutant indicate that a defect in lipid biosynthesis can be correlated with subsequent alterations in extracellular protein secretion and loss of other macromolecular functions including DNA, RNA, and protein syntheses. From studies of this mutant, two procedures of enriching for other temperature-sensitive mutants with defects in lipid biosynthesis have emerged: inositol overproduction and screening for increased buoyant densities.  相似文献   

19.
Thermonsenstivie division mutants were derived from Bacillus subtilis Marburg 168 thy trp2 by means of membrane filtration after nitrosoguanidine mutagenesis. Among them, ts42 requiring uracil for normal growth at 48°C was investigated.

In the absence of uracil, the mutant cells grew normally at 37°C and stopped dividing after temperature shift to 48°C resulting in filaments of two to four times length of normal rods. The total cell number after temperature shift from 37 to 48°C, increased two to three fold in 90 min and remained constant thereafter. The viable count after the temperature shift to 48°C, increased 1.5 to 2 fold in initial 60 min and then decreased exponentially. A rapid restoration of colony forming ability was shown when the mutant cells were shifted back to the permissive temperature after 120 to 180 min of incubation at 48°C or when uracil was introduced to the culture at 48°C. This recovery of viability was partly observed even in the presence of chloramphenicol. The synthesis of RNA of this mutant was shown to decline 20 min after the temperature shift to 48°C whereas the syntheses of DNA and protein proceeded for more than 80 min at that temperature.

No newly isolated uracil requiring mutants formed filaments in the medium lacking uracil or showed growth pattern like ts42.  相似文献   

20.
We recently described a 125 kd membrane glycoprotein in Saccharomyces cerevisiae which is anchored in the lipid bilayer by an inositol-containing phospholipid. We now find that when S. cerevisiae cells are metabolically labeled with [3H]myoinositol, many glycoproteins become labeled more strongly than the 125 kd protein. Myoinositol is attached to these glycoproteins as part of a phospholipid moiety which resembles glycophospholipid anchors of other organisms. Labeling of proteins with [3H]myoinositol for short times and in secretion mutants blocked at various stages of the secretory pathway shows that these phospholipid moieties can be added to proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum and that these proteins are transported to the Golgi by the regular secretory pathway. sec53, a mutant which cannot produce GDP-mannose at 37 degrees C, does not incorporate myoinositol or palmitic acid into membrane glycoproteins at this temperature, suggesting that GDP-mannose is required for the biosynthesis of these phospholipid moieties. All other secretion and glycosylation mutants tested add phospholipid moieties to proteins normally.  相似文献   

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