Affiliation:
1. Instituto de Biologı́a Molecular y Celular de Plantas, Universidad Politécnica de Valencia-CSIC, 46022 Valencia, Spain
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In the transcriptional response of
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
to stress, both activators and repressors are implicated. Here we demonstrate that the ion homeostasis determinant,
HAL1
, is regulated by two antagonistically operating bZIP transcription factors, the Sko1p repressor and the Gcn4p activator. A single CRE-like sequence (CRE
HAL1
) at position −222 to −215 with the palindromic core sequence TTACGTAA is essential for stress-induced expression of
HAL1
. Down-regulation of
HAL1
under normal growth conditions requires specific binding of Sko1p to CRE
HAL1
and the corepressor gene
SSN6
. Release from this repression depends on the function of the high-osmolarity glycerol pathway. The Gcn4p transcriptional activator binds in vitro to the same CRE
HAL1
and is necessary for up-regulated
HAL1
expression in vivo, indicating a dual control mechanism by a repressor-activator pair occupying the same promoter target sequence.
gcn4
mutants display a strong sensitivity to elevated K
+
or Na
+
concentrations in the growth medium. In addition to reduced
HAL1
expression, this sensitivity is explained by the fact that amino acid uptake is drastically impaired by high Na
+
and K
+
concentrations in wild-type yeast cells. The reduced amino acid biosynthesis of
gcn4
mutants would result in amino acid deprivation. Together with the induction of
HAL1
by amino acid starvation, these results suggest that salt stress and amino acid availability are physiologically interconnected.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
48 articles.
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