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1.
The COT1 and ZRC1 genes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae are structurally related dosage-dependent suppressors of metal toxicity. COT1 confers increased tolerance to high levels of cobalt; ZRC1 confers increased tolerance to high levels of zinc. The two genes are not linked and have been mapped; COT1 to chromosome XV and ZRC1 to chromosome XIII. Phenotypes related to metal homeostasis have been examined in strains with varied COT1 and ZRC1 gene doses. Overexpression of COT1 confers tolerance to moderately toxic levels of zinc and ZRC1 confers tolerance to moderately toxic levels of cobalt. Strains that carry null alleles at both loci are viable. The metal-hypersensitive phenotypes of mutations in either gene are largely unaffected by changes in dosage of the other. COT1 and ZRCI function independently in conferring tolerance to their respective metals, yet the uptake of cobalt ions by yeast cells is dependent on the gene dosage of ZRC1 as well as of COT1 Strains that overexpress ZRC1 have increased uptake of cobalt ions, while ZRCI null mutants exhibit decreased cobalt uptake. The defects in cobalt uptake due to mutations at COT1 and ZRC1 are additive, suggesting that the two genes are responsible for the majority of cobalt and zinc uptake in yeast cells. The function of either gene product seems to be more important in metal homeostasis than is the GRR1 gene product, which is also involved in metal metabolism. Mutations in the GRR1 gene have no effect on the cobalt-related phenotypes of strains that have altered gene dosage of either COT1 or ZRC1.  相似文献   

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Bloss T  Clemens S  Nies DH 《Planta》2002,214(5):783-791
The ZAT1p zinc transporter from Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. is a member of the cation diffusion facilitator (CDF) protein family. When heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli, ZAT1p bound zinc in a metal blot. Binding of zinc occurred mainly to the hydrophilic amino acid region from H182 to H232. A ZAT1p/ZAT1p*Delta(M1-I25) protein mixture was purified and reconstituted into proteoliposomes. Uptake of zinc into the proteoliposomes did not require a proton gradient across the liposomal membrane. ZAT1p did not transport cobalt, and transported cadmium at only 1% of the zinc transport rate. ZAT1p functioned as an uptake system for 65Zn2+ in two strains of the Gram-negative bacterium Ralstonia metallidurans, which were different in their content of zinc-efflux systems. The ZAT1 gene did not rescue increased zinc sensitivity of a Delta ZRC1single-mutant strain or of a Delta ZRC1 Delta COT1 double-mutant strain of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, but ZAT1 complemented this phenotype in a Delta SpZRC1 mutant strain of Schizosaccharomyces pombe.  相似文献   

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Iron is an essential nutrient but in excess may damage cells by generating reactive oxygen species due to Fenton reaction or by substituting for other transition metals in essential proteins. The budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae detoxifies cytosolic iron by storage in the vacuole. Deletion of CCC1, which encodes the vacuolar iron importer, results in high iron sensitivity due to increased cytosolic iron. We selected mutants that permitted Deltaccc1 cells to grow under high iron conditions by UV mutagenesis. We identified a mutation (N44I) in the vacuolar zinc transporter ZRC1 that changed the substrate specificity of the transporter from zinc to iron. COT1, a vacuolar zinc and cobalt transporter, is a homologue of ZRC1 and both are members of the cation diffusion facilitator family. Mutation of the homologous amino acid (N45I) in COT1 results in an increased ability to transport iron and decreased ability to transport cobalt. These mutations are within the second hydrophobic domain of the transporters and show the essential nature of this domain in the specificity of metal transport.  相似文献   

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Eleven cobalt-tolerant mutants were found to belong to a single complementation group, cot2. In addition to cobalt, the cot2 mutants were found to tolerate increased levels of the divalent cations Zn2+, Mn2+, and Ni2+ as well. All of the cot2 mutants exhibited a wiener-shaped cellular morphology that was exacerbated by the carbon and nitrogen source but was unaffected by metals. The rate of glucose-dependent transport of cobalt into cells was reduced in strains that carry mutations in the COT2 gene. COT2 is not essential for growth. Strains that carry a COT2 allele conferring complete loss of function are viable and exhibit phenotypes similar to those of spontaneous cot2 mutations. The sequence of the COT2 gene shows that it is identical to GRR1, which encodes a protein required for glucose repression. The glucose dependence of the transport defect implies that cot2 mutations affect the link between glucose metabolism and divalent cation active transport.  相似文献   

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Summary A DNA fragment conferring resistance to zinc and cadmium ions in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae was isolated from a library of yeast genomic DNA. Its nucleotide sequence revealed the presence of a single open reading frame (ORF; 1326 bp) having the potential to encode a protein of 442 amino acid residues (molecular mass of 48.3 kDa). A frameshift mutation introduced within the ORF abolished resistance to heavy metal ions, indicating the ORF is required for resistance. Therefore, we termed it the ZRC1 (zinc resistance conferring) gene. The deduced amino acid sequence of the gene product predicts a rather hydrophobic protein with six possible membrane-spanning regions. While multiple copies of the ZRC1 gene enable yeast cells to grow in the presence of 40 mM Zn2+, a level at which wild-type cells cannot survive, the disruption of the chromosomal ZRC1 locus, though not a lethal event, makes cells more sensitive to zinc ions than are wild-type cells.  相似文献   

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Several populations with different metal tolerance, uptake and root-to-shoot transport are known for the metal hyperaccumulator plant Thlaspi caerulescens. In this study, genes differentially expressed under various Zn exposures were identified from the shoots of two T. caerulescens accessions (calaminous and non-calaminous) using fluorescent differential display RT-PCR. cDNA fragments from 16 Zn-responsive genes, including those encoding metallothionein (MT) type 2 and type 3, MRP-like transporter, pectin methylesterase (PME) and Ole e 1-like gene as well as several unknown genes, were eventually isolated. The full-length MT2 and MT3 sequences differ from those previously isolated from other Thlaspi accessions, possibly representing new alleles or isoforms. Besides the differential expression in Zn exposures, the gene expression was dependent on the accession. Thlaspi homologues of ClpP protease and MRP transporter were induced at high Zn concentrations. MT2 and PME were expressed at higher levels in the calaminous accession. The MTs and MRP transporter expressed in transgenic yeasts were capable of conferring Cu and Cd tolerance, whereas the Ole e 1-like gene enhanced toxicity to these metals. The MTs increased yeast intracellular Cd content. As no significant differences were found between Arabidopsis and Thlaspi MTs, they apparently do not differ in their capacity to bind metals. However, the higher levels of MT2 in the calaminous accession may contribute to the Zn-adapted phenotype.  相似文献   

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BackgroundAcquisition and distribution of zinc supports a number of biological processes. Various molecular factors are involved in zinc metabolism but not fully explored.Basic proceduresSpontaneous mutants were generated in yeast with excess zinc culture followed by whole genome DNA sequencing to discover zinc metabolism related genes by bioinformatics. An identified mutant was characterized through metallomic and molecular biology methods.Main findingsHere we reported that MTM1 knockout cells displayed much stronger zinc tolerance than wild type cells on SC medium when exposed to excess zinc. Zn accumulation of mtm1Δ cells was dramatically decreased compared to wild type cells under excessive zinc condition due to MTM1 deletion reduced zinc uptake. ZRC1 mRNA level of mtm1Δ cells was significantly higher than that in the wild-type strain leading to increased vacuolar zinc accumulations in mtm1Δ cells. The mRNA levels of ZRT1 and ZAP1 decreased in mtm1Δ cells contributing to less Zn uptake. The zrc1Δmtm1Δ double knockout strain exhibited Zn sensitivity. MTM1 knockout did not afford resistance to excess zinc through an effect mediated through an influence on levels of ROS. Superoxide dismutase 2 (Sod2p) activity in mtm1Δ cells was severely impaired and not restored through Zn supplementation. Meanwhile, additional Zn showed no significant effect on the localization and expression of Mtm1p.Principal conclusionsOur study reveals the MTM1 gene plays an important role in the regulation of zinc homeostasis in yeast cells via changing zinc uptake and distribution. This discovery provides new insights for better understanding biochemical communication between vacuole and mitochondrial in relation to zinc-metabolism.  相似文献   

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 Wild-type Dictyostelium discoideum cells grow- ing on non-toxic levels of nickel chloride or cobaltous chloride accumulate 2–3.5 times as much nickel and at least 1.5 times as much cobalt as cobB mutants. The cobB trait is dominant, confers unstable cobalt and nickel resistance and is correlated with the presence of up to 50 copies of a linear extrachromosomal DNA, approximately 100 kb in length, derived from linkage group III. Independent cobB mutants can be obtained by selection on medium containing either cobalt or nickel. The amplified DNA can be transferred to wild-type strains by electroporation. Strains with mutations at a second cobalt resistance locus, cobA, accumulate the same amount of cobalt, but more nickel than wild-type strains. Our results are consistent with the cobA mutant phenotype being due to internal sequestration of cobalt, and the cobB mutant phenotype being due to reduced net uptake of cobalt and nickel. Energy-dependent nickel export was detectable in wild-type and cobB mutant strains but its role in heavy metal resistance has not yet been proved. Received: 21 December 1995/Accepted: 10 June 1996  相似文献   

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Microorganisms have adapted intricate signal transduction mechanisms to coordinate tolerance to toxic levels of metals, including two-component regulatory systems (TCRS). In particular, both cop and czc operons are regulated by TCRS; the cop operon plays a key role in bacterial tolerance to copper, whereas the czc operon is involved in the efflux of cadmium, zinc, and cobalt from the cell. Although the molecular physiology of heavy metal tolerance genes has been extensively studied, their evolutionary relationships are not well-understood. Phylogenetic relationships among heavy-metal efflux proteins and their corresponding two-component regulatory proteins revealed orthologous and paralogous relationships from species divergences and ancient gene duplications. The presence of heavy metal tolerance genes on bacterial plasmids suggests these genes may be prone to spread through horizontal gene transfer. Phylogenetic inferences revealed nine potential examples of lateral gene transfer associated with metal efflux proteins and two examples for regulatory proteins. Notably, four of the examples suggest lateral transfer across major evolutionary domains. In most cases, differences in GC content in metal tolerance genes and their corresponding host genomes confirmed lateral gene transfer events. Three-dimensional protein structures predicted for the response regulators encoded by cop and czc operons showed a high degree of structural similarity with other known proteins involved in TCRS signal transduction, which suggests common evolutionary origins of functional phenotypes and similar mechanisms of action for these response regulators.  相似文献   

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Wild-type Dictyostelium discoideum cells grow- ing on non-toxic levels of nickel chloride or cobaltous chloride accumulate 2–3.5 times as much nickel and at least 1.5 times as much cobalt as cobB mutants. The cobB trait is dominant, confers unstable cobalt and nickel resistance and is correlated with the presence of up to 50 copies of a linear extrachromosomal DNA, approximately 100?kb in length, derived from linkage group III. Independent cobB mutants can be obtained by selection on medium containing either cobalt or nickel. The amplified DNA can be transferred to wild-type strains by electroporation. Strains with mutations at a second cobalt resistance locus, cobA, accumulate the same amount of cobalt, but more nickel than wild-type strains. Our results are consistent with the cobA mutant phenotype being due to internal sequestration of cobalt, and the cobB mutant phenotype being due to reduced net uptake of cobalt and nickel. Energy-dependent nickel export was detectable in wild-type and cobB mutant strains but its role in heavy metal resistance has not yet been proved.  相似文献   

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Plants have the ability to colonize highly diverse environments. The zinc and cadmium hyperaccumulator Arabidopsis halleri has adapted to establish populations on soils covering an extreme range of metal availabilities. The A. halleri ZIP6 gene presents several hallmarks of hyperaccumulation candidate genes: it is constitutively highly expressed in roots and shoots and is associated with a zinc accumulation quantitative trait locus. Here, we show that AhZIP6 is duplicated in the A. halleri genome. The two copies are expressed mainly in the vasculature in both A. halleri and Arabidopsis thaliana, indicative of conserved cis regulation, and acquired partial organ specialization. Yeast complementation assays determined that AhZIP6 is a zinc and cadmium transporter. AhZIP6 silencing in A. halleri or expression in A. thaliana alters cadmium tolerance, but has no impact on zinc and cadmium accumulation. AhZIP6-silenced plants display reduced cadmium uptake upon short-term exposure, adding AhZIP6 to the limited number of Cd transporters supported by in planta evidence. Altogether, our data suggest that AhZIP6 is key to fine-tune metal homeostasis in specific cell types. This study additionally highlights the distinct fates of duplicated genes in A. halleri.  相似文献   

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Cobalt is an essential micronutrient but is toxic when present in excess. To study cobalt homeostasis we performed a genome-wide screen for deletion strains that show sensitivity or resistance to CoCl(2). Among 54 cobalt-sensitive strains, 18 are supersensitive strains, which are involved in histidine biosynthetic process, ubiquitination, mitochondria function, membrane trafficking, transporter and a variety of other known functions or still unknown functions. Furthermore, we identified 56 cobalt-resistant deletion strains, which are mainly involved in mitochondria function, signal transduction, ubiquitination, and gene expression and chromatin remodeling. Notably, deletion of the zhf1 (+) gene, encoding a zinc ion transporter, confers supersensitivity to cobalt and overexpression of the zhf1 (+) gene confers marked tolerance to cobalt, indicating that Zhf1 play key roles in cobalt detoxification. Interestingly, all the histidine-auxotrophic mutants displayed cobalt sensitivity and deletion of cationic amino acid transporter Cat1, which was shown to be involved in histidine uptake, suppressed the CoCl(2)-sensitive growth defect of the his2 mutants, suggesting that CoCl(2) may be transported into the cell together with histidine via histidine transporters including Cat1. In addition, we obtained results suggesting that the E2 ubiquitin conjugating enzyme Rhp6 and Sty1 stress MAP kinase pathway are involved in the regulation of cobalt homeostasis. Altogether, our genome-wide study demonstrates for the first time the mechanisms of cobalt homeostasis, particularly its uptake and detoxification in fission yeast.  相似文献   

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We describe the isolation of an Arabidopsis gene that is closely related to the animal ZnT genes (Zn transporter). The protein encoded by the ZAT (Zn transporter of Arabidopsis thaliana) gene has 398 amino acid residues and is predicted to have six membrane-spanning domains. To obtain evidence for the postulated function of the Arabidopsis gene, transgenic plants with the ZAT coding sequence under control of the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter were analyzed. Plants obtained with ZAT in the sense orientation exhibited enhanced Zn resistance and strongly increased Zn content in the roots under high Zn exposure. Antisense mRNA-producing plants were viable, with a wild-type level of Zn resistance and content, like plants expressing a truncated coding sequence lacking the C-terminal cytoplasmic domain of the protein. The availability of ZAT can lead to a better understanding of the mechanism of Zn homeostasis and resistance in plants.Several heavy metals are essential during plant growth and development, but their excess can easily lead to toxic effects. Contamination of soils with heavy metals, either by natural causes or due to pollution, often has pronounced effects on the vegetation, resulting in the appearance of metallophytes, heavy-metal-tolerant plants. The precise mechanisms of uptake, transport, and accumulation of heavy metals in plants are poorly understood, but several genes likely to be involved in these processes have been described. Recently, a family of ZIP genes that are expressed in roots upon Zn deficiency was isolated from Arabidopsis (Grotz et al., 1998). The proteins encoded by the ZIP genes have eight predicted TM regions and a high degree of similarity to the ZRT genes from yeast that are involved in Zn uptake. Expression of the ZIP genes in yeast conferred Zn-uptake activities to these cells, demonstrating that they are probably functional homologs of the yeast ZRT genes (Grotz et al., 1998). The only other metal-transporting protein recently identified in plants belongs to the large family of cation-transporting P-type ATPases (Tabata et al., 1997), but these proteins are structurally very different from the metal-transporting proteins mentioned above.Recent data have provided more insight into the mechanisms of heavy-metal tolerance. Metallophytes often exhibit tolerance to several different heavy metals, but all of these metals need not be present at toxic levels in their habitat (Schat and ten Bookum, 1992a; Schat and Vooijs, 1997, and refs. therein; Schat and Verkleij, 1998). Although such a feature is suggestive of a general mechanism of heavy-metal tolerance, recent genetic evidence has shown that a number of different mechanisms must exist, each with its own metal specificity (Schat and Vooijs, 1997). In Arabidopsis, a plant species with a typical level of tolerance to heavy metals, it has been demonstrated that the Cd-sensitive mutants cad1 and cad2 are defective in the synthesis of the metal-binding compound phytochelatin (Howden et al., 1995). cad1 plants were only slightly more sensitive to Cu and Zn, indicating that phytochelatin-mediated detoxification is not sufficient for Cu and Zn detoxification (Howden et al., 1995b). Metallothioneins appear to be of major importance for constitutive Cu tolerance in Arabidopsis (Zhou and Goldsbrough, 1994).Aside from complexation of heavy metals by heavy-metal-binding proteins, there is evidence that transport-mediated sequestration can contribute to heavy-metal tolerance. In the Zn-tolerant plant Silene vulgaris it was shown that Zn transport across the tonoplast was about 2.5 times higher than in Zn-sensitive plants of the same species (Verkleij et al., 1998). The ZRC1 gene from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes a protein with six putative TM regions; when overexpressed, this gene confers elevated resistance to Zn and Cd (Kamizono et al., 1989). A structurally very similar gene, COT1, was later found to be involved in Co accumulation in yeast (Conklin et al., 1992).Recently, several genes homologous to ZRC1 and COT1 have been described in mammalian cells. The first gene discovered, ZnT-1 (Zn transporter 1), was cloned by virtue of its ability to complement a mutated, Zn-sensitive cell line (Palmiter and Finley, 1995). Subsequently, ZnT-2 (Palmiter et al., 1996), ZnT-3 (Wenzel et al., 1997), and ZnT-4 (Huang and Gitschier, 1997) have been described. The ZnT-1 protein most likely transports Zn out of the cells (Palmiter and Finley, 1995), whereas ZnT-2 confers Zn resistance by facilitating vesicular sequestration (Palmiter et al., 1996a). Other proteins related to yeast ZRC1/COT1 and mammalian ZnT have been found in several bacteria; for example, the CzcD protein from Alcaligenes eutrophus might be involved in Zn efflux (Nies, 1992).A family of proteins with six TM regions thus seems to be involved in the transport of heavy metals, mostly Zn, thereby conferring enhanced resistance toward these metals. To our knowledge, no plant homologs of this rather widespread gene family have yet been described. In this paper we describe an Arabidopsis cDNA clone encoding a protein closely related to the ZnT family of mammalian Zn transporters, demonstrating that plants do contain these types of genes. Experiments were performed to analyze the functional properties of the gene. We demonstrate that overexpression of the complete protein-coding domain results in enhanced Zn resistance and increased accumulation of Zn in the root. The relevance of these findings is discussed.  相似文献   

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