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Calcium and Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Authors:Ladislav Kov     
Affiliation:Institute of Animal Physiology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, 900 28 Ivanka pri Dunaji, Czechoslovakia
Abstract:The claim that Ca may be a dispensable element for yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been reexamined. The cells of S. cerevisiae could grow in media which contained no added Ca and were deprived of contaminating Ca2+ by filtration through a Chelex 100 column. Also, the cells were able to grow in the presence of fairly high concentrations of EGTA. The apparent intracellular concentrations of Ca, assessed from the content of radioactive 45Ca in cells preloaded with 45CaCl2, could vary within the range of approx. 2 nM to 2.8 mM, without adversively affecting growth or morphology of the cells. An extremely low affinity for Ca2+ of the system taking up Ca into the cells was corroborated. However, even the Chelex 100-treated media were found in contain 1–5 μM Ca when maintained in glass culture vessels. Also, the ability of the cells to take up Ca from a medium containing surplus of EGTA or EDTA was demonstrated. su14CEDTA, alone or in the presence of Ca, could also be transported into the cells. It has been inferred that Ca must be as essential for yeast as it is for other eucaryotic organisms. The omnipresence of contaminating Ca and peculiarities of the Ca transporting system, combined with an intricate intracellular compartmentation of Ca, would account for the impossibility to prove the importance of Ca for yeast by direct growth studies.
Keywords:Ca2+ transport   Growth control   (S. cerevisiae)
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