Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, University of Washington, Seattle Washington, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In the yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
, the switch from respiratory metabolism to fermentation causes rapid decay of transcripts encoding proteins uniquely required for aerobic metabolism. Snf1, the yeast ortholog of AMP-activated protein kinase, has been implicated in this process because inhibiting Snf1 mimics the addition of glucose. In this study, we show that the
SNF1
-dependent
ADH2
promoter, or just the major transcription factor binding site, is sufficient to confer glucose-induced mRNA decay upon heterologous transcripts.
SNF1
-independent expression from the
ADH2
promoter prevented glucose-induced mRNA decay without altering the start site of transcription.
SNF1
-dependent transcripts are enriched for the binding motif of the RNA binding protein Vts1, an important mediator of mRNA decay and mRNA repression whose expression is correlated with decreased abundance of
SNF1
-dependent transcripts during the yeast metabolic cycle. However, deletion of
VTS1
did not slow the rate of glucose-induced mRNA decay.
ADH2
mRNA rapidly dissociated from polysomes after glucose repletion, and sequences bound by RNA binding proteins were enriched in the transcripts from repressed cells. Inhibiting the protein kinase A pathway did not affect glucose-induced decay of
ADH2
mRNA. Our results suggest that Snf1 may influence mRNA stability by altering the recruitment activity of the transcription factor Adr1.
Funder
HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
12 articles.
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