Asg7p-Ste3p Inhibition of Pheromone Signaling: Regulation of the Zygotic Transition to Vegetative Growth

Author:

Roth Amy F.1,Nelson Bryce2,Boone Charlie2,Davis Nicholas G.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery 1 and

2. Banting and Best Department of Medical Research, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 1L62

3. Departments of Surgery and Pharmacology, 3 Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan 48201, and

Abstract

ABSTRACT The inappropriate expression of the a-factor pheromone receptor (Ste3p) in the MAT a cell leads to a striking inhibition of the yeast pheromone response, the result of a functional interaction between Ste3p and some MAT a-specific protein. The present work identifies this protein as Asg7p. Normally, expression of Ste3p and Asg7p is limited to distinct haploid mating types, Ste3p to MAT α cells and Asg7p to MAT a cells. Artificial coexpression of the two in the same cell, either a or α, leads to dramatic inhibition of the pheromone response. Ste3p-Asg7p coexpression also perturbs the membrane trafficking of Ste3p: Ste3p turnover is slowed, a result of an Asg7p-mediated retardation of the secretory delivery of the newly synthesized receptor to the plasma membrane. However, in the absence of ectopic Ste3p expression, the asg7 Δ mutation is without consequence either for pheromone signaling or overall mating efficiency of a cells. Indeed, the sole phenotype that can be assigned to MAT a asg7 Δ cells is observed following zygotic fusion to its α mating partner. Though formed at wild-type efficiency, zygotes from these pairings are morphologically abnormal. The pattern of growth is deranged: emergence of the first mitotic bud is delayed, and, in its place, growth is apparently diverted into a novel structure superficially resembling the polarized mating projection characteristic of haploid cells responding to pheromone. Together these results suggest a mechanism in which, following the zygotic fusion event, Ste3p and Asg7p gain access to one another and together act to repress the pheromone response, promoting the transition of the new diploid cell to vegetative growth.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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