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Background

Protein-O-mannosyltransferases (Pmt''s) catalyze the initial step of protein-O-glycosylation, the addition of mannose residues to serine or threonine residues of target proteins.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Based on protein similarities, this highly conserved protein family can be divided into three subfamilies: the Pmt1 sub-family, the Pmt2 sub-family and the Pmt4 sub-family. In contrast to Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Candida albicans, but similar to filamentous fungi, three putative PMT genes (PMT1, PMT2, and PMT4) were identified in the genome of the human fungal pathogen Cryptococcus neoformans. Similar to Schizosaccharomyces pombe and C. albicans, C. neoformans PMT2 is an essential gene. In contrast, the pmt1 and pmt4 single mutants are viable; however, the pmt1/pmt4 deletions are synthetically lethal. Mutation of PMT1 and PMT4 resulted in distinct defects in cell morphology and cell integrity. The pmt1 mutant was more susceptible to SDS medium than wild-type strains and the mutant cells were enlarged. The pmt4 mutant grew poorly on high salt medium and demonstrated abnormal septum formation and defects in cell separation. Interestingly, the pmt1 and pmt4 mutants demonstrated variety-specific differences in the levels of susceptibility to osmotic and cell wall stress. Delayed melanin production in the pmt4 mutant was the only alteration of classical virulence-associated phenotypes. However, the pmt1 and pmt4 mutants showed attenuated virulence in a murine inhalation model of cryptococcosis.

Conclusion/Significance

These findings suggest that C. neoformans protein-O-mannosyltransferases play a crucial role in maintaining cell morphology, and that reduced protein-O-glycosylation leads to alterations in stress resistance, cell wall composition, cell integrity, and survival within the host.  相似文献   

3.
Protein O mannosylation is a crucial protein modification in uni- and multicellular eukaryotes. In humans, a lack of O-mannosyl glycans causes congenital muscular dystrophies that are associated with brain abnormalities. In yeast, protein O mannosylation is vital; however, it is not known why impaired O mannosylation results in cell death. To address this question, we analyzed the conditionally lethal Saccharomyces cerevisiae protein O-mannosyltransferase pmt2 pmt4Delta mutant. We found that pmt2 pmt4Delta cells lyse as small-budded cells in the absence of osmotic stabilization and that treatment with mating pheromone causes pheromone-induced cell death. These phenotypes are partially suppressed by overexpression of upstream elements of the protein kinase C (PKC1) cell integrity pathway, suggesting that the PKC1 pathway is defective in pmt2 pmt4Delta mutants. Congruently, induction of Mpk1p/Slt2p tyrosine phosphorylation does not occur in pmt2 pmt4Delta mutants during exposure to mating pheromone or elevated temperature. Detailed analyses of the plasma membrane sensors of the PKC1 pathway revealed that Wsc1p, Wsc2p, and Mid2p are aberrantly processed in pmt mutants. Our data suggest that in yeast, O mannosylation increases the activity of Wsc1p, Wsc2p, and Mid2p by enhancing their stability. Reduced O mannosylation leads to incorrect proteolytic processing of these proteins, which in turn results in impaired activation of the PKC1 pathway and finally causes cell death in the absence of osmotic stabilization.  相似文献   

4.
Weber Y  Prill SK  Ernst JF 《Eukaryotic cell》2004,3(5):1164-1168
Sec20p is an essential endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane protein in yeasts, functioning as a tSNARE component in retrograde vesicle traffic. We show that Sec20p in the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans is extensively O mannosylated by protein mannosyltransferases (Pmt proteins). Surprisingly, Sec20p occurs at wild-type levels in a pmt6 mutant but at very low levels in pmt1 and pmt4 mutants and also after replacement of specific Ser/Thr residues in the lumenal domain of Sec20p. Pulse-chase experiments revealed rapid degradation of unmodified Sec20p (38.6 kDa) following its biosynthesis, while the stable O-glycosylated form (50 kDa) was not formed in a pmt1 mutant. These results suggest a novel function of O mannosylation in eukaryotes, in that modification by specific Pmt proteins will prevent degradation of ER-resident membrane proteins via ER-associated degradation or a proteasome-independent pathway.  相似文献   

5.
Protein mannosyltransferases (Pmt proteins) initiate O glycosylation of secreted proteins in fungi. We have characterized PMT6, which encodes the second Pmt protein of the fungal pathogen Candida albicans. The residues of Pmt6p are 21 and 42% identical to those of C. albicans Pmt1p and S. cerevisiae Pmt6p, respectively. Mutants lacking one or two PMT6 alleles grow normally and contain normal Pmt enzymatic activities in cell extracts but show phenotypes including a partial block of hyphal formation (dimorphism) and a supersensitivity to hygromycin B. The morphogenetic defect can be suppressed by overproduction of known components of signaling pathways, including Cek1p, Cph1p, Tpk2p, and Efg1p, suggesting a specific Pmt6p target protein upstream of these components. Mutants lacking both PMT1 and PMT6 are viable and show pmt1 mutant phenotypes and an additional sensitivity to the iron chelator ethylenediamine-di(o-hydroxyphenylacetic acid). The lack of Pmt6p significantly reduces adherence to endothelial cells and overall virulence in a mouse model of systemic infection. The results suggest that Pmt6p regulates a more narrow subclass of proteins in C. albicans than Pmt1p, including secreted proteins responsible for morphogenesis and antifungal sensitivities.  相似文献   

6.
Wsc1 and Mid2 are highly O-glycosylated cell surface proteins that reside in the plasma membrane of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. They have been proposed to function as mechanosensors of cell wall stress induced by wall remodeling during vegetative growth and pheromone-induced morphogenesis. These proteins are required for activation of the cell wall integrity signaling pathway that consists of the small G-protein Rho1, protein kinase C (Pkc1), and a mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade. We show here by two-hybrid experiments that the C-terminal cytoplasmic domains of Wsc1 and Mid2 interact with Rom2, a guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) for Rho1. At least with regard to Wsc1, this interaction is mediated by the Rom2 N-terminal domain. This domain is distinct from the Rho1-interacting domain, suggesting that the GEF can interact simultaneously with a sensor and with Rho1. We also demonstrate that extracts from wsc1 and mid2 mutants are deficient in the ability to catalyze GTP loading of Rho1 in vitro, providing evidence that the function of the sensor-Rom2 interaction is to stimulate nucleotide exchange toward this G-protein. In a related line of investigation, we identified the PMT2 gene in a genetic screen for mutations that confer an additive cell lysis defect with a wsc1 null allele. Pmt2 is a member of a six-protein family in yeast that catalyzes the first step in O mannosylation of target proteins. We demonstrate that Mid2 is not mannosylated in a pmt2 mutant and that this modification is important for signaling by Mid2.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Zhou H  Hu H  Zhang L  Li R  Ouyang H  Ming J  Jin C 《Eukaryotic cell》2007,6(12):2260-2268
Protein O-mannosyltransferases initiate O mannosylation of secretory proteins, which are of fundamental importance in eukaryotes. In this study, the PMT gene family of the human fungal pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus was identified and characterized. Unlike the case in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, where the PMT family is highly redundant, only one member of each PMT subfamily, namely, Afpmt1, Afpmt2, and Afpmt4, is present in A. fumigatus. Mutants with a deletion of Afpmt1 are viable. In vitro and in vivo activity assays confirmed that the protein encoded by Afpmt1 acts as an O-mannosyltransferase (AfPmt1p). Characterization of the ΔAfpmt1 mutant showed that a lack of AfPmt1p results in sensitivity to elevated temperature and defects in growth and cell wall integrity, thereby affecting cell morphology, conidium formation, and germination. In a mouse model, Afpmt1 was not required for the virulence of A. fumigatus under the experimental conditions used.  相似文献   

9.
Cells of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae choose bud sites in a manner that is dependent upon cell type: a and alpha cells select axial sites; a/alpha cells utilize bipolar sites. Mutants specifically defective in axial budding were isolated from an alpha strain using pseudohyphal growth as an assay. We found that a and alpha mutants defective in the previously identified PMT4 gene exhibit unipolar, rather than axial budding: mother cells choose axial bud sites, but daughter cells do not. PMT4 encodes a protein mannosyl transferase (pmt) required for O-linked glycosylation of some secretory and cell surface proteins (Immervoll, T., M. Gentzsch, and W. Tanner. 1995. Yeast. 11:1345-1351). We demonstrate that Axl2/Bud10p, which is required for the axial budding pattern, is an O-linked glycoprotein and is incompletely glycosylated, unstable, and mislocalized in cells lacking PMT4. Overexpression of AXL2 can partially restore proper bud-site selection to pmt4 mutants. These data indicate that Axl2/Bud10p is glycosylated by Pmt4p and that O-linked glycosylation increases Axl2/ Bud10p activity in daughter cells, apparently by enhancing its stability and promoting its localization to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

10.
The O-mannosyltransferase Pmt4 has emerged as crucial for fungal virulence in the animal pathogens Candida albicans or Cryptococcus neoformans as well as in the phytopathogenic fungus Ustilago maydis. Pmt4 O-mannosylates specific target proteins at the Endoplasmic Reticulum. Therefore a deficient O-mannosylation of these target proteins must be responsible for the loss of pathogenicity in pmt4 mutants. Taking advantage of the characteristics described for Pmt4 substrates in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we performed a proteome-wide bioinformatic approach to identify putative Pmt4 targets in the corn smut fungus U. maydis and validated Pmt4-mediated glycosylation of candidate proteins by electrophoretic mobility shift assays. We found that the signalling mucin Msb2, which regulates appressorium differentiation upstream of the pathogenicity-related MAP kinase cascade, is O-mannosylated by Pmt4. The epistatic relationship of pmt4 and msb2 showed that both are likely to act in the same pathway. Furthermore, constitutive activation of the MAP kinase cascade restored appressorium development in pmt4 mutants, suggesting that during the initial phase of infection the failure to O-mannosylate Msb2 is responsible for the virulence defect of pmt4 mutants. On the other hand we demonstrate that during later stages of pathogenic development Pmt4 affects virulence independently of Msb2, probably by modifying secreted effector proteins. Pit1, a protein required for fungal spreading inside the infected leaf, was also identified as a Pmt4 target. Thus, O-mannosylation of different target proteins affects various stages of pathogenic development in U. maydis.  相似文献   

11.
12.
O‐mannosylation is an essential protein modification in eukaryotes. It is initiated at the endoplasmic reticulum by O‐mannosyltransferases (PMT) that are evolutionary conserved from yeast to humans. The PMT family is phylogenetically classified into PMT1, PMT2 and PMT4 subfamilies, which differ in protein substrate specificity and number of genes per subfamily. In this study, we characterized for the first time the whole PMT family of a pathogenic filamentous fungus, Aspergillus fumigatus. Genome analysis showed that only one member of each subfamily is present in A. fumigatus, PMT1, PMT2 and PMT4. Despite the fact that all PMTs are transmembrane proteins with conserved peptide motifs, the phenotype of each PMT deletion mutant was very different in A. fumigatus. If disruption of PMT1 did not reveal any phenotype, deletion of PMT2 was lethal. Disruption of PMT4 resulted in abnormal mycelial growth and highly reduced conidiation associated to significant proteomic changes. The double pmt1pmt4 mutant was lethal. The single pmt4 mutant exhibited an exquisite sensitivity to echinocandins that is associated to major changes in the expression of signal transduction cascade genes. These results indicate that the PMT family members play a major role in growth, morphogenesis and viability of A. fumigatus.  相似文献   

13.
We constructed hybrid proteins containing a plant α-galactosidase fused to various C-terminal moieties of the hypoxic Srp1p; this allowed us to identify a cell wall-bound form of Srp1p. We showed that the last 30 amino acids of Srp1p, but not the last 16, contain sufficient information to signal glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol anchor attachment and subsequent cell wall anchorage. The cell wall-bound form was shown to be linked by means of a β1,6-glucose-containing side-chain. Pmt1p enzyme is known as a protein-O-mannosyltransferase that initiates the O-glycosidic chains on proteins. We found that a pmt1 deletion mutant was highly sensitive to zymolyase and that in this strain the α-galactosidase–Srp1 fusion proteins, an α-galactosidase–Sed1 hybrid protein and an α-galactosidase–α-agglutinin hybrid protein were absent from both the membrane and the cell wall fractions. However, the plasma membrane protein Gas1p still receives its glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol anchor in pmt1 cells, and in this mutant strain an α-galactosidase–Cwp2 fusion protein was found linked to the cell wall but devoid of β1,6-glucan side-chain, indicating an alternative mechanism of cell wall anchorage.  相似文献   

14.
Protein-O-glycosylation in yeast: protein-specific mannosyltransferases   总被引:11,自引:2,他引:9  
S.cerevisiae contains at least six genes (PMT1–6) fordolicholphosphate-D-mannose: protein-O-D-mannosyltransferases.The in vivo mannosylation of seven O-mannosylated yeast proteinshas been analyzed in a number of pmt mutants. The results clearlyindicate that the various protein O-mannosyltransferases havedifferent specificities for protein substrates. Five of theproteins tested (chitinase, a-agglutinin, Kre9p, Bar1p, Pir2p/hsp150)are mainly underglycosylated in pmt1 and pmt2 mutants, wherebyqualitative differences exist among the various proteins. Twoof the O-mannosylated proteins (Ggp1p and Kex2p) are not atall affected in pmt1 and pmt2 mutants but are clearly underglycosylatedwhen PMT4 is mutated. Although the PMT4 gene product is shownto be responsible for O-mannosylating a Ser-rich region of Ggp1pin vivo, a penta-seryl-peptide is not an in vitro substratefor this transferase. A PMT3 mutation does affect O-manno-sylationof chitinase only in the genetic background of a pmt1pmt2 doublemutation, indicating that PMT1 and PMT2 can compensate for adeleted PMT3 gene. dolichol-phosphate PMT gene family protein glycosylation S. cerevisiae  相似文献   

15.
杨娇  李东  潘皎  朱旭东 《微生物学报》2011,51(6):740-746
摘要:【目的】Snf1/AMPK在真核生物中是重要的且高度保守的一类蛋白激酶。在新型隐球酵母中,SNF1 基因在调节致病因子的生物合成和细胞毒力方面具有重要作用。本文进一步报道了该基因在维持细胞壁完整方面的新功能,这一功能在其他微生物中未见报道。【方法】利用荧光增白剂染料(Calcofluor white dye)染色,荧光显微观察细胞分离、胞壁完整性;利用恒定流速和压力水流冲击菌落,测定细胞黏附琼脂糖表面能力;在含有十二烷基硫酸钠(Sodium dodecyl sulfate,SDS),刚果红(Congo red)染料和增白剂(Fluorescent Brightener 28)的培养基上观察突变株的生长情况,以验证细胞壁完整性。【结果】SNF1 基因突变菌株对细胞壁抑制剂SDS等敏感,表明细胞壁完整性的损坏;在葡萄糖固体培养基上表现为细胞与琼脂间的黏附力丧失;在热击压力下,该菌株不能正常生长,而这种生长缺陷能够被渗透平衡抑制。【结论】新型隐球酵母SNF1 基因对于维持细胞壁完整性是非常重要的,并且影响细胞与琼脂间黏附作用以及细胞对抗热的能力。  相似文献   

16.
M Gentzsch  W Tanner 《The EMBO journal》1996,15(21):5752-5759
The transfer of mannose to seryl and threonyl residues of secretory proteins is catalyzed by a family of protein mannosyltransferases coded for by seven genes (PMT1-7). Mannose dolichylphosphate is the sugar donor of the reaction, which is localized at the endoplasmic reticulum. By gene disruption and crosses all single, double and triple mutants of genes PMT1-4 were constructed. Two of the double and three of the triple mutants were not able to grow under normal conditions; three of these mutants could grow, however, when osmotically stabilized. The various mutants were extensively characterized concerning growth, morphology and their sensitivity to killer toxin K1, caffeine and calcofluor white. O-Mannosylation of gp115/Gas1p was affected only in pmt4 mutants, whereas glycosylation of chitinase was mainly affected in pmt1 and pmt2 mutants. The results show that protein O-glycosylation is essential for cell wall rigidity and cell integrity and that this protein modification, therefore, is vital for Saccharomyces cerevisiae.  相似文献   

17.
Aspergillus nidulans possesses three pmt genes encoding protein O-d-mannosyltransferases (Pmt). Previously, we reported that PmtA, a member of the PMT2 subfamily, is involved in the proper maintenance of fungal morphology and formation of conidia (T. Oka, T. Hamaguchi, Y. Sameshima, M. Goto, and K. Furukawa, Microbiology 150:1973-1982, 2004). In the present paper, we describe the characterization of the pmtA paralogues pmtB and pmtC. PmtB and PmtC were classified as members of the PMT1 and PMT4 subfamilies, respectively. A pmtB disruptant showed wild-type (wt) colony formation at 30°C but slightly repressed growth at 42°C. Conidiation of the pmtB disruptant was reduced to approximately 50% of that of the wt strain; in addition, hyperbranching of hyphae indicated that PmtB is involved in polarity maintenance. A pmtA and pmtB double disruptant was viable but very slow growing, with morphological characteristics that were cumulative with respect to either single disruptant. Of the three single pmt mutants, the pmtC disruptant showed the highest growth repression; the hyphae were swollen and frequently branched, and the ability to form conidia under normal growth conditions was lost. Recovery from the aberrant hyphal structures occurred in the presence of osmotic stabilizer, implying that PmtC is responsible for the maintenance of cell wall integrity. Osmotic stabilization at 42°C further enabled the pmtC disruptant to form conidiophores and conidia, but they were abnormal and much fewer than those of the wt strain. Apart from the different, abnormal phenotypes, the three pmt disruptants exhibited differences in their sensitivities to antifungal reagents, mannosylation activities, and glycoprotein profiles, indicating that PmtA, PmtB, and PmtC perform unique functions during cell growth.Protein glycosylation, which is a major posttranslational modification, plays essential roles in eukaryotic cells from fungi to mammals (19). N-linked oligosaccharides in glycoproteins that share relatively common structures are structurally classified into high-mannose, complex, and hybrid types (3). O-linked oligosaccharides in glycoproteins are diverse with respect to their sugar components and the mode of sugar linkages among the eukaryotic organisms (8, 19). O mannosylation, which is commonly found in the glycoproteins of fungi, has been extensively studied in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae (4, 21, 35). The initial reaction of mannose transfer to serine and threonine residues in proteins is catalyzed by protein O-d-mannosyltransferase (Pmt) in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), where dolichyl phosphate-mannose is required as an immediate sugar donor (4). In the Golgi complex, O mannosylation in S. cerevisiae is linearly elongated by up to five mannose residues by mannosyltransferases (Mnt) that utilize GDP-mannose as the mannosyl donor. At least six Pmt-encoding genes (PMT1 to -6), three α-1,2-Mnt-encoding genes (KRE2, KTR1, and KTR3), and three α-1,3-Mnt-encoding genes (MNN1, MNT2, and MNT3) are known to be involved in O mannosylation in S. cerevisiae (21, 31, 45).The Pmt family of proteins can be classified into the PMT1, PMT2, and PMT4 subfamilies based on phylogeny (6). Proteins of the PMT1 subfamily form a heteromeric complex with proteins belonging to the PMT2 subfamily, and PMT4 subfamily proteins form a homomeric complex (7). Simultaneous disruptions of three different types of PMT genes were lethal (4), suggesting that each class provided a unique function for O mannosylation. Yeasts other than S. cerevisiae, such as Schizosaccharomyces pombe (38, 41), Candida albicans (29), and Cryptococcus neoformans (28), possess three to five pmt genes, which have been characterized. Several studies provide evidence that protein O mannosylation modulates the functions and stability of secretory proteins and thereby affects the growth and morphology of these yeasts. O mannosylation by Pmt2 in S. cerevisiae (ScPmt2) provides protection from ER-associated degradation and also functions as a fail-safe mechanism for ER-associated degradation (11, 13, 23). Likewise, in C. albicans, CaPmt1- and CaPmt4-mediated O mannosylation specifically protects CaSec20 from proteolytic degradation in the ER (40). Cell wall integrity is maintained in S. cerevisiae by increased stabilization and correct localization of the sensor proteins ScWsc and ScMid2 due to O mannosylation by ScPmt2 and ScPmt4 (20). Similarly, the stability and localization to the plasma membrane of axial budding factor ScAxl2/Bud10 is enhanced by ScPmt4-mediated O mannosylation, increasing its activity (32). ScPmt4-mediated O glycosylation also functions as a sorting determinant for cell surface delivery of ScFus1 (30). CaPmt4-mediated O glycosylation is required for environment-specific morphogenetic signaling and for the full virulence of C. albicans (29).With respect to filamentous fungi like Aspergillus that develop hyphae in a highly ordered manner, which then differentiate to form conidiospores, little is known about the function and synthetic pathway of the O-mannose-type oligosaccharides. O-Glycans in glycoproteins of Aspergillus include sugars other than mannose, and their structures have been determined (8). The initial mannosylation catalyzed by Pmts is found in Aspergillus and occurs as in yeasts (8).We characterized the pmtA gene of Aspergillus nidulans (AnpmtA), belonging to the PMT2 subfamily, and found that the mutant exhibited a fragile cell wall phenotype and alteration in the carbohydrate composition, with a reduction in the amount of skeletal polysaccharides in the cell wall (26, 33). Recently, the Afpmt1 gene belonging to the PMT1 family of Aspergillus fumigatus, a human pathogen, was characterized. AfPmt1 is crucial for cell wall integrity and conidium morphology (46).In this study, we characterize the pmtB and pmtC genes of A. nidulans to understand their contribution to the cell morphology of this filamentous fungus. We also demonstrate that the PmtA, PmtB, and PmtC proteins have distinct specificities for protein substrates and function differently during cell growth of filamentous fungi.  相似文献   

18.
The mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways control diverse cellular functions in pathogenic fungi, including sexual differentiation, stress response, and maintenance of cell wall integrity. Here we characterized a Cryptococcus neoformans gene, which is homologous to the yeast Ste50 that is known to play an important role in mating pheromone response and stress response as an adaptor protein to the Ste11 MAPK kinase kinase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The C. neoformans Ste50 was not involved in any of the stress responses or virulence factor production (capsule and melanin) that are controlled by the HOG and Ras/cAMP signaling pathways. However, Ste50 was required for mating in both serotype A and serotype D C. neoformans strains. The ste50Δ mutant was completely defective in cell-cell fusion and mating pheromone production. Double mutation of the STE50 gene blocked increased production of pheromone and the hyper-filamentation phenotype of cells deleted of the CRG1 gene, which encodes the RGS protein that negatively regulates pheromone responsive G-protein signaling via the MAPK pathway. Regardless of the presence of the basidiomycota-specific SH3 domains of Ste50 that are known to be required for full virulence of Ustilago maydis, Ste50 was dispensable for virulence of C. neoformans in a murine model of cryptococcosis. In conclusion, the Ste50 adaptor protein controls sexual differentiation of C. neoformans via the pheromone-responsive MAPK pathway but is not required for virulence.  相似文献   

19.
The cell wall of pathogenic fungi such as Cryptococcus neoformans , provides a formidable barrier to secrete virulence factors that produce host cell damage. To study secretion of virulence factors to the cell periphery, sec6 RNAi mutant strains of C. neoformans were tested for virulence factor expression. The studies reported here show that SEC6 RNAi mutant strains were defective in a number of virulence factors including laccase, urease as well as soluble polysaccharide and demonstrated attenuated virulence in mice. Further analysis by transmission electron microscopy detected the production of abundant extracellular exosomes in wild-type strains containing empty plasmid, but a complete absence in the i SEC6 strain. In addition, a green fluorescent protein–laccase fusion protein demonstrated aberrant localization within cytoplasmic vesicles in i SEC6 strains. In contrast, i SEC6 strains retained normal growth at 37°C, as well as substantially normal capsule formation, phospholipase activity and total secreted protein. These results provide the first molecular evidence for the existence of fungal exosomes and associate these vesicles with the virulence of C. neoformans .  相似文献   

20.
Unlike ubiquitin, the ubiquitin-like protein modifier SUMO-1 and its budding yeast homologue Smt3p have been shown to be more important for posttranslational protein modification than for protein degradation. Here we describe the identification of the SUMO-1 homologue of fission yeast, which we show to be required for a number of nuclear events including the control of telomere length and chromosome segregation. A disruption of the pmt3(+) gene, the Schizosaccharomyces pombe homologue of SMT3, was not lethal, but mutant cells carrying the disrupted gene grew more slowly. The pmt3Delta cells showed various phenotypes such as aberrant mitosis, sensitivity to various reagents, and high-frequency loss of minichromosomes. Interestingly, we found that pmt3(+) is required for telomere length maintenance. Loss of Pmt3p function caused a striking increase in telomere length. When Pmt3p synthesis was restored, the telomeres became gradually shorter. This is the first demonstration of involvement of one of the Smt3p/SUMO-1 family proteins in telomere length maintenance. Fusion of Pmt3p to green fluorescent protein (GFP) showed that Pmt3p was predominantly localized as intense spots in the nucleus. One of the spots was shown to correspond to the spindle pole body (SPB). During prometaphase- and metaphase, the bright GFP signals at the SPB disappeared. These observations suggest that Pmt3p is required for kinetochore and/or SPB functions involved in chromosome segregation. The multiple functions of Pmt3p described here suggest that several nuclear proteins are regulated by Pmt3p conjugation.  相似文献   

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