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1.
CDP-diacylglycerol (CDP-DG) is an important branchpoint intermediate in eucaryotic phospholipid biosynthesis and could be a key regulatory site in phospholipid metabolism. Therefore, we examined the effects of growth phase, phospholipid precursors, and the disruption of phosphatidylcholine (PC) synthesis on the membrane-associated phospholipid biosynthetic enzymes CDP-DG synthase, phosphatidylglycerolphosphate (PGP) synthase, phosphatidylinositol (PI) synthase, and phosphatidylserine (PS) synthase in cell extracts of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. In complete synthetic medium containing inositol, maximal expression of CDP-DG synthase, PGP synthase, PI synthase, and PS synthase in wild-type cells occurred in the exponential phase of growth and decreased two- to fourfold in the stationary phase of growth. In cells starved for inositol, this decrease in PGP synthase, PI synthase, and PS synthase expression was not observed. Starvation for inositol resulted in a twofold derepression of PGP synthase and PS synthase expression, while PI synthase expression decreased initially and then remained constant. Upon the addition of inositol to inositol-starved cells, there was a rapid and continued increase in PI synthase expression. We examined expression of these enzymes in cho2 and cho1 mutants, which are blocked in the methylation pathway for synthesis of PC. Choline starvation resulted in a decrease in PS synthase and CDP-DG synthase expression in cho1 but not cho2 cells. Expression of PGP synthase and PI synthase was not affected by choline starvation. Inositol starvation resulted in a 1.7-fold derepression of PGP synthase expression in cho2 but not cho1 cells when PC was synthesized. PS synthase expression was not depressed, while CDP-DG synthase and PI synthase expression decreased in cho2 and cho1 cells in the absence of inositol. These results demonstrate that (i) CDP-DG synthase, PGP synthase, PI synthase, and PS synthase are similarly regulated by growth phase; (ii) inositol affects the expression of PGP synthase, PI synthase, and PS synthase; (iii) disruption of the methylation pathway results in aberrant patterns of regulation of growth phase and phospholipid precursors. Important differences between S. pombe and Saccharomyces cerevisiae with regard to regulation of these enzymes are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
Valproate (VPA) is one of the two drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of bipolar disorder. The therapeutic mechanism of VPA has not been established. We have shown previously that growth of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae in the presence of VPA causes a decrease in intracellular inositol and inositol-1-P, and a dramatic increase in expression of INO1, which encodes the rate limiting enzyme for de novo inositol biosynthesis. To understand the underlying mechanism of action of VPA, INO1, CHO1 and INO2 expression, intracellular inositol and phospholipid biosynthesis were studied as a function of acute and chronic exposure of growing cells to the drug. A decrease in intracellular inositol was apparent immediately after addition of VPA. Surprisingly, expression of genes that are usually derepressed during inositol depletion, including INO1, CHO1 and INO2 (that contain inositol-responsive UASINO sequences) decreased several fold during the first hour, after which expression began to increase. Incorporation of 32Pi into total phospholipids was significantly decreased. Pulse labelling of CDP-DG and PG, shown previously to increase during inositol depletion, increased within 30 min. However, pulse labelling of PS, which normally increases during inositol depletion, was decreased within 30 min. PS synthase activity in cell extracts decreased with time, although VPA did not directly inhibit PS synthase enzyme activity. Thus, in contrast to the effect of chronic VPA treatment, short-term exposure to VPA abrogated the normal response to inositol depletion of inositol responsive genes and led to aberrant synthesis of phospholipids.  相似文献   

3.
chol mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae are deficient in the synthesis of the phospholipid phosphatidylserine owing to lowered activity of the membrane-associated enzyme phosphatidylserine synthase. chol mutants are auxotrophic for ethanolamine or choline and, in the absence of these supplements, cannot synthesize phosphatidylethanolamine or phosphatidylcholine (PC). We exploited these characteristics of the chol mutants to examine the regulation of phospholipid metabolism in S. cerevisiae. Macromolecular synthesis and phospholipid metabolism were examined in chol cells starved for ethanolamine. As expected, when chol mutants were starved for ethanolamine, the rates of synthesis of the phospholipids phosphatidylethanolamine and PC declined rapidly. Surprisingly, however, coupled to the decline in PC biosynthesis was a simultaneous decrease in the overall rate of phospholipid synthesis. In particular, the rate of synthesis of phosphatidylinositol decreased in parallel with the decline in PC biosynthesis. The results obtained suggest that the slowing of PC biosynthesis in ethanolamine-starved chol cells leads to a coordinated decrease in the synthesis of all phospholipids. However, under conditions of ethanolamine deprivation in chol cells, the cytoplasmic enzyme inositol-1-phosphate synthase could not be repressed by exogenous inositol, and the endogenous synthesis of the phospholipid precursor inositol appeared to be elevated. The implications of these findings with respect to the coordinated regulation of phospholipid synthesis are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Cardiolipin (CL) synthase activity was characterized in mitochondrial extracts of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and was shown for the first time to utilize CDP-diacylglycerol as a substrate. CL synthase exhibited a pH optimum of 9.0. Maximal activity was obtained in the presence of 20 mM magnesium with a Triton X-100: phospholipid ratio of 1:1. The apparent Km values for phosphatidylglycerol and CDP-diacylglycerol were 1 mM and 36 microM, respectively. CL synthase activity was maximal at 45 degrees C and heat inactivation studies showed that the enzyme retained greater than 75% of its activity at temperatures up to 55 degrees C. To study the regulation of CL synthase, the enzyme was assayed in cells grown under conditions known to affect general phospholipid synthesis. Unlike many phospholipid biosynthetic enzymes including PGP synthase, which catalyzes the initial step in CL biosynthesis, CL synthase was not repressed in cells grown in the presence of the phospholipid precursor inositol. Detailed procedures for the enzymatic synthesis of 32P-labelled substrates are described.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Phospholipid metabolism in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae opi1 mutant, which excretes inositol and is constitutive for the biosynthetic enzyme inositol-1-phosphate synthase (M. Greenberg, P. Goldwasser, and S. Henry, Mol. Gen. Genet. 186:157-163, 1982), was examined and compared to that of a wild-type strain. In wild-type S. cerevisiae, the phospholipid composition and the relative rates of synthesis of individual phospholipids change in response to the availability of exogenous supplies of soluble phospholipid precursors, particularly inositol. The opi1 mutant, in contrast, displays a relatively invariant phospholipid composition, and its pattern of phospholipid synthesis does not change in response to exogenous phospholipid precursors. Phosphatidylinositol synthase was not found to be regulated in either wild-type or opi1 cells. In wild-type cells, phosphatidylserine synthase and the phospholipid N-methyltransferases are coordinately repressed in response to a combination of inositol and choline. However, in opi1 cells these activities are expressed constitutively. These results suggest that the gene product of the OPI1 locus participates in the coordinate regulation of phospholipid synthesis.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The addition of inositol to the growth medium of Saccharomyces cerevisiae resulted in rapid changes in the rates of phospholipid biosynthesis. The partitioning of the phospholipid intermediate CDP-diacylglycerol was shifted to phosphatidylinositol at the expense of phosphatidylserine and its derivatives phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylcholine. Serine at 133-fold greater concentrations than that of inositol shifted the partitioning of CDP-diacylglycerol to phosphatidylserine at the expense of phosphatidylinositol but to a much lesser degree. Kinetic experiments with pure phosphatidylserine synthase and phosphatidylinositol synthase indicated that the partitioning of CDP-diacylglycerol between phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylinositol was not governed by the affinities both enzymes have for their common substrate CDP-diacylglycerol. Instead, the main regulation of phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylserine synthesis was through the exogenous supply of inositol. The Km of inositol (0.21 mM) for phosphatidylinositol synthase was 9-fold higher than cytosolic concentration of inositol (24 microM). The Km of serine (0.83 mM) for phosphatidylserine synthase was 3-fold below the cytosolic concentration of serine (2.6 mM). Therefore, inositol supplementation resulted in a dramatic increase in the rate of phosphatidylinositol synthesis, whereas serine supplementation resulted in little affect on the rate of phosphatidylserine synthesis. Inositol also contributed to the regulation of phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylserine synthesis by having a direct affect on phosphatidylserine synthase activity. Kinetic experiments with pure phosphatidylserine synthase showed that inositol was a noncompetitive inhibitor of the enzyme with a Ki of 65 microM.  相似文献   

9.
The biosynthesis of phosphatidylserine (PS) and its conversion to phosphatidylcholine (PC) are regulated coordinately by inositol and choline in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (G. M. Carman and S. A. Henry, 1989, Annu. Rev. Biochem. 58, 635-669). In this study, PS decarboxylase activity is shown to be partially repressed when inositol is added to the medium of cells in the log phase of growth, and the extent of repression is augmented by the inclusion of choline, but not ethanolamine. The kinetics of repression and derepression of PS decarboxylase, PS synthase, and phospholipid N-methyltransferase (PNMT) activities, as regulatory responses to the availability of exogenous inositol and choline, have been characterized. When inositol was added to the medium of cell cultures growing exponentially, the three biosynthetic enzyme activities reached an intermediate level of repression (50-85% of control) within 60 min. After the addition of the combination of inositol and choline, PS decarboxylase, PS synthase, and PNMT activities decreased to the intermediate levels of repression in 60 min and were subsequently reduced to 15-40% of control values during a later stage of regulation (2-3 h). In a derepression study, the three enzyme activities remained relatively stable for approximately 60 min following the removal of choline and/or inositol from the growth medium, but the specific activities of PS decarboxylase, PS synthase, and PNMT increased to maximally derepressed levels within 2-3 h. The induction of the three biosynthetic activities was blocked by cycloheximide, but not by chloramphenicol. In summary, the level of PS decarboxylase activity in S. cerevisiae is partially and reversibly suppressed by inositol and further diminished by the combination of inositol and choline. The biphasic kinetics of repression by inositol and choline suggest that the effect of choline is dependent on earlier events mediated by inositol and possibly involves a separate regulatory factor(s).  相似文献   

10.
The addition of ethanolamine or choline to inositol-containing growth medium of Saccharomyces cerevisiae wild-type cells resulted in a reduction of membrane-associated phosphatidylserine synthase (CDPdiacylglycerol:L-serine O-phosphatidyltransferase, EC 2.7.8.8) activity in cell extracts. The reduction of activity did not occur when inositol was absent from the growth medium. Under the growth conditions where a reduction of enzyme activity occurred, there was a corresponding qualitative reduction of enzyme subunit as determined by immunoblotting with antiserum raised against purified phosphatidylserine synthase. Water-soluble phospholipid precursors did not effect purified phosphatidylserine synthase activity. Phosphatidylserine synthase (activity and enzyme subunit) was not regulated by the availability of water-soluble phospholipid precursors in S. cerevisiae VAL2C(YEp CHO1) and the opi1 mutant. VAL2C(YEp CHO1) is a plasmid-bearing strain that over produces phosphatidylserine synthase activity, and the opi1 mutant is an inositol biosynthesis regulatory mutant. The results of this study suggest that the regulation of phosphatidylserine synthase by the availability of phospholipid precursors occurs at the level of enzyme formation and not at the enzyme activity level. Furthermore, the regulation of phosphatidylserine synthase is coupled to inositol synthesis.  相似文献   

11.
Five allelic Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants deficient in the methylation of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) have been isolated, using two different screening techniques. Biochemical analysis suggested that these mutants define a locus, designated CHO2, that may encode a methyltransferase. Membranes of cho2 mutant cells grown in defined medium contain approximately 10% phosphatidylcholine (PC) and 40-50% PE as compared to wild-type levels of 40-45% PC and 15-20% PE. In spite of this greatly altered phospholipid composition, cho2 mutant cells are viable in defined medium and are not auxotrophic for choline or other phospholipid precursors such as monomethylethanolamine (MME). However, analysis of yeast strains carrying more than one mutation affecting phospholipid biosynthesis indicated that some level of methylated phospholipid is essential for viability. The cho2 locus was shown by tetrad analysis to be unlinked to other loci affecting phospholipid synthesis. Interestingly, cho2 mutants and other mutant strains that produce reduced levels of methylated phospholipids are unable to properly repress synthesis of the cytoplasmic enzyme inositol-1-phosphate synthase. This enzyme was previously shown to be regulated at the level of mRNA abundance in response to inositol and choline in the growth medium. We cloned the CHO2 gene on a 3.6-kb genomic DNA fragment and created a null allele of cho2 by disrupting the CHO2 gene in vivo. The cho2 disruptant, like all other cho2 mutants, is viable, exhibits altered regulation of inositol biosynthesis and is not auxotrophic for choline or MME.  相似文献   

12.
Monolayers of porcine kidney cells (LLC-PK) were grown in a series of Nu-Serum-supplemented media containing different Mg(2+) concentrations (480, 250, 25, 6.3 or 2.6 microM) to study the effect of Mg(2+) depletion on cellular phospholipid changes and the consequent effect on the membrane permeability to Ca(2+). Cells grown on 6.3 or 2.6 microM Mg(2+) showed a decrease in PE, PS, Sph, PI and an increase of PC. These changes were attributed mainly to the decreased rate of Sph synthesis through the transfer of phosphocholine from PC to ceramide, or due to the increase of PE N-methylation as found in Mg(2+)-deficient cells. The (45)Ca uptake was increased in cells grown on 25.0 microM Mg(2+), while it was decreased in cells grown on 6.3 or 2.6 microM Mg(2+). These changes in Ca(2+) uptake were related to changes of cellular phospholipids and fatty acids which affect adenylate cyclase activity in the membrane, as well as the membrane fluidity.  相似文献   

13.
The addition of ethanolamine or choline to inositol-containing growth medium resulted in a reduction of CTP:phosphatidate cytidylyltransferase (CDP-diacylglycerol synthase; EC 2.7.7.41) activity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The reduction of activity did not occur in the absence of inositol. CDP-diacylglycerol synthase activity was not regulated in a S. cerevisiae mutant strain (opi1; an inositol biosynthesis regulatory mutant) by the addition of phospholipid precursors to the growth medium.  相似文献   

14.
Ethanol at concentrations up to 5% (v/v) had no effect on the growth of Schizosaccharomyces pombe, whereas concentrations over 7.5% were inhibitory. The major membrane phospholipids in S. pombe cells growing aerobically in the absence of added ethanol were phosphatidylinositol, phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine. Oleic acid (18:1) was the main fatty acid. When ethanol (7.5%) was added to aerobically growing cultures, the phosphatidylinositol content increased, whereas the 18:1 content decreased. Similar changes were observed in the membrane phospholipids of cells grown anaerobically without ethanol. However, the presence of ethanol in anaerobically growing cultures had an opposite effect on fatty acids, as the 18:1 content increased. The results support the idea that ethanol tolerance in S. pombe may be connected with a high content of 18:1 fatty acids, and with the ability to maintain a high rate of phospholipid biosynthesis.  相似文献   

15.
Growth and metabolism of inositol-starved Saccharomyces cerevisiae.   总被引:26,自引:12,他引:14       下载免费PDF全文
Upon starvation for inositol, a phospholipid precursor, an inositol-requiring mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been shown to die if all other conditions are growth supporting. The growth and metabolism of inositol-starved cells has been investigated in order to determine the physiological state leading to "inositolless death". The synthesis of the major inositol-containing phospholipid ceases within 30 min after the removal of inositol from the growth medium. The cells, however, continue in an apparently normal fashion for one generation (2 h under the growth conditions used in this study). The cessation of cell division is not preceded or accompanied by any detectable change in the rate of macromolecular synthesis. When cell division ceases, the cells remain constant in volume, whereas macromolecular synthesis continues at first at an unchanged rate and eventually at a decreasing rate. Macromolecular synthesis terminates after about 4 h of inositol starvation, at approximately the time when the cells begin to die. Cell death is also accompanied by a decline in cellular potassium and adenosine triphosphate levels. The cells can be protected from inositolless death by several treatments that block cellular metabolism. It is concluded that inositol starvation results in a imbalance between the expansion of cell volume and the accumulation of cytoplasmic constituents. This imbalance is very likely the cause of inositolless death.  相似文献   

16.
Phosphatidylinositol (PI) is an abundant phospholipid in the cytoplasmic membrane of mycobacteria and the precursor for more complex glycolipids, such as the PI mannosides (PIMs) and lipoarabinomannan (LAM). To investigate whether the large steady-state pools of PI and apolar PIMs are required for mycobacterial growth, we have generated a Mycobacterium smegmatis inositol auxotroph by disruption of the ino1 gene. The ino1 mutant displayed wild-type growth rates and steady-state levels of PI, PIM, and LAM when grown in the presence of 1 mM inositol. The non-dividing ino1 mutant was highly resistant to inositol starvation, reflecting the slow turnover of inositol lipids in this stage. In contrast, dilution of growing or stationary-phase ino1 mutant in inositol-free medium resulted in the rapid depletion of PI and apolar PIMs. Whereas depletion of these lipids was not associated with loss of viability, subsequent depletion of polar PIMs coincided with loss of major cell wall components and cell viability. Metabolic labeling experiments confirmed that the large pools of PI and apolar PIMs were used to sustain polar PIM and LAM biosynthesis during inositol limitation. They also showed that under non-limiting conditions, PI is catabolized via lyso-PI. These data suggest that large pools of PI and apolar PIMs are not essential for membrane integrity but are required to sustain polar PIM biosynthesis, which is essential for mycobacterial growth.  相似文献   

17.
A Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutant (cdg1 mutation) was isolated on the basis of an inositol excretion phenotype and exhibited pleiotropic deficiencies in phospholipid biosynthesis. Genetic analysis of the mutant confirmed that the cdg1 mutation represents a new genetic locus and that a defect in a single gene was responsible for the Cdg1 phenotype. CDP-diacylglycerol synthase activity in mutant haploid cells was 25% of the wild-type derepressed level. Biochemical and immunoblot analyses revealed that the defect in CDP-diacylglycerol synthase activity in the cdg1 mutant was due to a reduced level of the CDP-diacylglycerol synthase Mr-56,000 subunit rather than to an alteration in the enzymological properties of the enzyme. This defect resulted in a reduced rate of CDP-diacylglycerol synthesis, an elevated phosphatidate content, and alterations in overall phospholipid synthesis. Unlike wild-type cells, CDP-diacylglycerol synthase was not regulated in response to water-soluble phospholipid precursors. The cdg1 lesion also caused constitutive expression of inositol-1-phosphate synthase and elevated phosphatidylserine synthase. Phosphatidylinositol synthase was not affected in the cdg1 mutant.  相似文献   

18.
The in vivo metabolic pathways of phospholipid biosynthesis in Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides have been investigated. Rapid pulse-chase-labeling studies indicated that phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylglycerol were synthesized as in other eubacteria. The labeling pattern observed for N-acylphosphatidylserine (NAPS) was inconsistent with the synthesis of this phospholipid occurring by direct acylation of phosphatidylserine (PS). Rather, NAPS appeared to be kinetically derived from an earlier intermediate such as phosphatidic acid or more likely CDP-diglyceride. Tris-induced NAPS accumulation specifically reduced the synthesis of PS. Treatment of cells with a bacteriostatic concentration of hydroxylamine (10 mM) greatly reduced total cellular phospholipid synthesis, resulted in accumulation of PS, and stimulated the phosphatidylglycerol branch of phospholipid metabolism relative to the PS branch of the pathway. When the cells were treated with a lower hydroxylamine dosage (50 microM), total phospholipid synthesis lagged as PS accumulated, however, phospholipid synthesis resumed coincident with a reversal of PS accumulation. Hydroxylamine alone was not sufficient to promote NAPS accumulation but this compound allowed continued NAPS accumulation when cells were grown in medium containing Tris. The significance of these observations is discussed in terms of NAPS biosynthesis being representative of a previously undescribed branch of the phospholipid biosynthetic sequence.  相似文献   

19.
Phosphatidylglycerolphosphate synthase (PGPS; CDP-diacylglycerol glycerol 3-phosphate 3-phosphatidyltransferase; EC 2.7.8.5) catalyzes the first step in the synthesis of cardiolipin, an acidic phospholipid found in the mitochondrial inner membrane. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, PGPS expression is coordinately regulated with general phospholipid synthesis and is repressed when cells are grown in the presence of the phospholipid precursor inositol (M. L. Greenberg, S. Hubbell, and C. Lam, Mol. Cell. Biol. 8:4773-4779, 1988). In this study, we examined the regulation of PGPS in growth conditions affecting mitochondrial development (carbon source, growth stage, and oxygen availability) and in strains with genetic lesions affecting mitochondrial function. PGPS derepressed two- to threefold when cells were grown in a nonfermentable carbon source (glycerol-ethanol), and this derepression was independent of the presence of inositol. PGPS derepressed two- to fourfold as cells entered the stationary phase of growth. Stationary-phase derepression occurred in both glucose- and glycerol-ethanol-grown cells and was slightly greater in cells grown in the presence of inositol and choline. PGPS expression in mitochondria was not affected when cells were grown in the absence of oxygen. In mutants lacking mitochondrial DNA [( rho0] mutants), PGPS activity was 30 to 70% less than in isogenic [rho+] strains. PGPS activity in [rho0] strains was subject to inositol-mediated repression. PGPS activity in [rho0] cell extracts was derepressed twofold as the [rho0] cells entered the stationary phase of growth. No growth phase derepression was observed in mitochondrial extracts of the [rho0] cells. Relative cardiolipin content increased in glycerol-ethanol-grown cells but was not affected by growth stage or by growth in the presence of the phospholipid precursors inositol and choline. These results demonstrate that (i) PGPS expression is regulated by factors affecting mitochondrial development; (ii) regulation of PGPS by these factors is independent of cross-pathway control; and (iii) PGPS expression is never fully repressed, even during anaerobic growth.  相似文献   

20.
The protein kinase C (PKC)-MAPK signaling cascade is activated and is essential for viability when cells are starved for the phospholipid precursor inositol. In this study, we report that inhibiting inositol-containing sphingolipid metabolism, either by inositol starvation or treatment with agents that block sphingolipid synthesis, triggers PKC signaling independent of sphingoid base accumulation. Under these same growth conditions, a fluorescent biosensor that detects the necessary PKC signaling intermediate, phosphatidylinositol (PI)-4-phosphate (PI4P), is enriched on the plasma membrane. The appearance of the PI4P biosensor on the plasma membrane correlates with PKC activation and requires the PI 4-kinase Stt4p. Like other mutations in the PKC-MAPK pathway, mutants defective in Stt4p and the PI4P 5-kinase Mss4p, which generates phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate, exhibit inositol auxotrophy, yet fully derepress INO1, encoding inositol-3-phosphate synthase. These observations suggest that inositol-containing sphingolipid metabolism controls PKC signaling by regulating access of the signaling lipids PI4P and phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate to effector proteins on the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

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