Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological Sciences, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487
2. Department of Biological Sciences, Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15282
Abstract
ABSTRACT
To investigate the contributions of phosphatidylethanolamine to the growth and morphogenesis of the fission yeast
Schizosaccharomyces pombe
, we have characterized three predicted genes in this organism, designated
psd1
,
psd2
, and
psd3
, encoding phosphatidylserine decarboxylases, which catalyze the conversion of phosphatidylserine to phosphatidylethanolamine in both eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms.
S. pombe
mutants carrying deletions in any one or two
psd
genes are viable in complex rich medium and synthetic defined minimal medium. However, mutants carrying deletions in all three
psd
genes (
psd1-3
Δ mutants) grow slowly in rich medium and are inviable in minimal medium, indicating that the
psd1
to
psd3
gene products share overlapping essential cellular functions. Supplementation of growth media with ethanolamine, which can be converted to phosphatidylethanolamine by the Kennedy pathway, restores growth to
psd1-3
Δ cells in minimal medium, indicating that phosphatidylethanolamine is essential for
S. pombe
cell growth.
psd1-3
Δ cells produce lower levels of phosphatidylethanolamine than wild-type cells, even in medium supplemented with ethanolamine, indicating that the Kennedy pathway can only partially compensate for the loss of phosphatidylserine decarboxylase activity in
S. pombe
.
psd1-3Δ
cells appear morphologically indistinguishable from wild-type
S. pombe
cells in medium supplemented with ethanolamine, but when cultured in nonsupplemented medium, they produce high frequencies of abnormally shaped cells as well as cells exhibiting severe septation defects, including multiple, mispositioned, deformed, and misoriented septa. Our results demonstrate that phosphatidylethanolamine is essential for cell growth and for normal cytokinesis and cellular morphogenesis in
S. pombe
, and they illustrate the usefulness of this model eukaryote for investigating potentially conserved biological and molecular functions of phosphatidylethanolamine.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
23 articles.
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