Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular & Integrative Physiology
2. Department of Statistics, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801
Abstract
ABSTRACT
DNA arrays were used to investigate the functional role of Rox1 in mediating acclimatization to anaerobic conditions in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
. Multiple growth conditions for wild-type and
rox1
null strains were used to identify open reading frames with a statistically robust response to this repressor. These results were compared to those obtained for a wild-type strain in response to oxygen availability. Transcripts of nearly one-sixth of the genome were differentially expressed (
P
< 0.05) with respect to oxygen availability, the majority (>65%) being down-regulated under anoxia. Of the anaerobically induced genes, about one-third (106) contain putative Rox1-binding sites in their promoters and were significantly (
P
< 0.05) up-regulated in the
rox1
null strains under aerobiosis. Additional promoter searches revealed that nearly one-third of the anaerobically induced genes contain an AR1 site(s) for the Upc2 transcription factor, suggesting that Upc2 and Rox1 regulate the majority of anaerobically induced genes in
S. cerevisiae
. Functional analyses indicate that a large fraction of the anaerobically induced genes are involved in cell stress (∼1/3), cell wall maintenance (∼1/8), carbohydrate metabolism (∼1/10), and lipid metabolism (∼1/12), with both Rox1 and Upc2 predominating in the regulation of this latter group and Upc2 predominating in cell wall maintenance. Mapping the changes in expression of functional regulons onto metabolic pathways has provided novel insight into the role of Rox1 and other
trans
-acting factors in mediating the physiological response of
S. cerevisiae
to anaerobic conditions.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
202 articles.
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