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Intracellular vesicle trafficking is mediated by a set of SNARE proteins in eukaryotic cells. Several SNARE proteins are required for vacuolar protein transport and vacuolar biogenesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A search of the Schizosaccharomyces pombe genome database revealed a total of 17 SNARE-related genes. Although no homologs of Vam3p, Nyv1p, and Vam7p have been found in S. pombe, we identified one SNARE-like protein that is homologous to S. cerevisiae Pep12p. However, the disruptants transport vacuolar hydrolase CPY (SpCPY) to the vacuole normally, suggesting that the Pep12 homolog is not required for vacuolar protein transport in S. pombe cells. To identify the SNARE protein(s) involved in Golgi-to-vacuole protein transport, we have deleted four SNARE homolog genes in S. pombe. SpCPY was significantly missorted to the cell surface on deletion of one of the SNARE proteins, Fsv1p (SPAC6F12.03c), with no apparent S. cerevisiae ortholog. In addition, sporulation, endocytosis, and in vivo vacuolar fusion appear to be normal in fsv1Delta cells. These results showed that Fsv1p is mainly involved in vesicle-mediated protein transport between the Golgi and vacuole in S. pombe cells.  相似文献   

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We describe regulation of the subcellular localization of cyclic AMP (cAMP)-dependent protein kinase (PKA) regulatory (Cgs1p) and catalytic (Pka1p) subunits in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe in response to physiological stresses and during sexual differentiation as determined by fluorescence microscopy of the Cgs1-green fluorescent protein (GFP) and Pka1-GFP fusion proteins, respectively. In wild-type S. pombe cells cultured to log phase under normal growth conditions, Cgs1p and Pka1p are concentrated in the nucleus and more diffusely present in the cytoplasm. Nuclear localization of both proteins is dependent on cAMP, since in cells lacking adenylate cyclase they are detectable only in the cytoplasm. In cells lacking Cgs1p or both Cgs1p and adenylate cyclase, Pka1p is concentrated in the nucleus, demonstrating a role for Cgs1p in the nuclear exclusion of Pka1p. Nuclear-cytoplasmic redistribution of Cgs1p and Pka1p is triggered by growth in glucose-limited or hyperosmotic media and in response to stationary-phase growth. In addition, both proteins are excluded from the nucleus in mating cells undergoing karyogamy and subsequently concentrated in postmeiotic spores. Cgs1p is required for subcellular redistribution of Pka1p induced by growth in glucose-limited and hyperosmotic media and during karyogamy but is not required for Pka1p redistribution triggered by stationary-phase growth or for the enrichment of Pka1p in spores. Our results demonstrate that PKA localization is regulated by cAMP and regulatory subunit-dependent and -independent mechanisms in S. pombe.  相似文献   

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G Draetta  L Brizuela  J Potashkin  D Beach 《Cell》1987,50(2):319-325
cdc2+ and CDC28 play central roles in the cell division cycles of the widely divergent yeasts Schizosaccharomyces pombe and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, respectively. The genes encode protein kinases that show 62% protein sequence identity and are capable of cross-complementation. Monoclonal antibodies were raised against p34cdc2, and a subset recognize p36cdc28. The cross-reacting antibodies detected a 34 kd homolog of the p34cdc2/p36CDC28, protein in HeLa cells. Human p34 was also recognized by an affinity-purified polyclonal anti-p34cdc2 serum. Peptide mapping of p34cdc2, p36CDC28, and human p34 revealed complete conservation of four tryptophan residues in the three proteins. p34 thus appears to be closely related to the two yeast proteins. In addition, a p34 immune complex showed protein kinase activity in vitro, and HeLa cell p34 interacts with p13, the human homolog of the suc1+ gene product of S. pombe.  相似文献   

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The RNA1 gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is defined by the temperature-sensitive rna1-1 mutation that interferes with the maturation and/or nucleocytoplasmic transport of RNA. We describe the purification of a 44-kDa protein from the evolutionary distant fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe and the cloning and sequence analysis of the corresponding gene. Although this protein shares only 42% sequence identity with the RNA1 gene product, it represents a functional homologue because the expression of the S. pombe gene in S. cerevisiae complements the rna1-1 defect. Disruption in S. pombe of the gene encoding the 44-kDa protein, for which we propose the name S. pombe rna1p, reveals that it is essential for growth. Our analysis of purified S. pombe rna1p represents the first biochemical characterization of an RNA1 gene product and reveals that it is a monomeric protein of globular shape. Cell fractionation and immunofluorescence microscopy indicate that rna1p is a cytoplasmic protein possibly enriched in the nuclear periphery. We identify a sequence motif of 29 residues, which is rich in leucine and repeated eight times both in S. pombe and in S. cerevisiae rna1p. Similar leucine-rich repeats present in a series of other proteins, e.g., the mammalian ribonuclease/angiogenin inhibitor, adenylyl cyclase from S. cerevisiae, the toll protein from Drosophila melanogaster, and the sds22 protein phosphatase regulatory subunit from S. pombe, are thought to be involved in protein-protein interactions. Thus rna1p may act as a scaffold protein possibly interacting in the nuclear periphery with a protein ligand that could be associated with exported RNA.  相似文献   

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Using the cloned Saccharomyces cerevisiae YPT1 gene as hybridization probe, a gene, designated ypt2, was isolated from the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe and found to encode a 200 amino acid long protein most closely related to the ypt branch of the ras superfamily. Disruption of the ypt2 gene is lethal. The bacterially produced ypt2 gene product is shown to bind GTP. A region of the ypt2 protein corresponding to but different from the 'effector region' of ras proteins is also different from that of ypt1 proteins of different species but identical to the 'effector loop' of the S.cerevisiae SEC4 gene product, a protein known to be required for vesicular protein transport. The S.pombe ypt2 gene under control of the S.cerevisiae GAL10 promoter is able to suppress the temperature-sensitive phenotype of a S. cerevisiae sec4 mutant, indicating a functional similarity of these GTP-binding proteins from the two very distantly related yeasts.  相似文献   

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