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« Previous AbstractSystems biology: deviations in mating    Next AbstractA role for a protease in morphogenic responses during yeast cell fusion »

J Cell Biol


Title:Role of the ABC transporter Ste6 in cell fusion during yeast conjugation
Author(s):Elia L; Marsh L;
Address:"Department of Cell Biology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461, USA"
Journal Title:J Cell Biol
Year:1996
Volume:135
Issue:3
Page Number:741 - 751
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.135.3.741
ISSN/ISBN:0021-9525 (Print) 1540-8140 (Electronic) 0021-9525 (Linking)
Abstract:"Though early stages of yeast conjugation are well-mimicked by treatment with pheromones, the final degradation of the cell wall and membrane fusion of mating that leads to cytoplasmic mixing may require separate signals. Mutations that blocked cell fusion during mating in Saccharomyces cerevisiae were identified in a multipartite screen. The three tightest mutations proved to be partial-function alleles of the ABC-transporter gene STE6 required for transport of a-factor. The ste6(cefl-1) allele was recovered and sequenced. The ste6(cefl-1) allele contained a stop codon predicted to truncate Ste6 at amino acid residue 862 (of 1290). The ste6(cef) mutations reduced, but did not eliminate, expression of a-factor. Light and electron microscopy revealed that unlike ste6 null mutations which block mating before the formation of mating pairs, the ste6(cef) (cell fusion) alleles permitted early steps in mating to proceed normally but blocked at a late stage in conjugation where mating partners were encased by a single cell wall and separated by only a thin layer of cell wall material we term the fusion wall. Morphologically the prezygotes appeared symmetrical with successful cell wall fusion at the periphery of the region of cell contact. Responses to a-factor were efficiently induced in partner cells under mating conditions as expected given the symmetric appearance of the prezygotes. A strain expressing a ste6(K1093A) mutation that conferred export of a twofold to fourfold higher level of a-factor than ste6(cef) did not accumulate prezygotes during mating which could indicate a tight threshold of a-factor signaling required for mating. However, mating to an sst2 partner which has a greatly increased sensitivity to a-factor did not suppress the fusion defect of a ste6(cef) strain. Overexpression of the structural gene for a-factor also did not suppress the fusion defect. It is possible that a-factor or STE6 play more complex roles in cell fusion"
Keywords:"ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/genetics/*physiology Alleles Biological Transport Cell Wall/ultrastructure Chromosome Mapping Conjugation, Genetic/*genetics Fungal Proteins/genetics/metabolism/*physiology *Glycoproteins Lipoproteins/genetics/pharmacolog;"
Notes:"MedlineElia, L Marsh, L eng GM43365/GM/NIGMS NIH HHS/ P30 CA 13330/CA/NCI NIH HHS/ Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S. 1996/11/01 J Cell Biol. 1996 Nov; 135(3):741-51. doi: 10.1083/jcb.135.3.741"

 
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