Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and Center for Diabetes Research, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana 46202
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In the yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
, glycogen is accumulated as a carbohydrate reserve when cells are deprived of nutrients. Yeast mutated in
SNF1
, a gene encoding a protein kinase required for glucose derepression, has diminished glycogen accumulation and concomitant inactivation of glycogen synthase. Restoration of synthesis in an
snf1
strain results only in transient glycogen accumulation, implying the existence of other
SNF1
-dependent controls of glycogen storage. A genetic screen revealed that two genes involved in autophagy,
APG1
and
APG13
, may be regulated by
SNF1
. Increased autophagic activity was observed in wild-type cells entering the stationary phase, but this induction was impaired in an
snf1
strain. Mutants defective for autophagy were able to synthesize glycogen upon approaching the stationary phase, but were unable to maintain their glycogen stores, because subsequent synthesis was impaired and degradation by phosphorylase, Gph1p, was enhanced. Thus, deletion of
GPH1
partially reversed the loss of glycogen accumulation in autophagy mutants. Loss of the vacuolar glucosidase,
SGA1
, also protected glycogen stores, but only very late in the stationary phase. Gph1p and Sga1p may therefore degrade physically distinct pools of glycogen. Pho85p is a cyclin-dependent protein kinase that antagonizes
SNF1
control of glycogen synthesis. Induction of autophagy in
pho85
mutants entering the stationary phase was exaggerated compared to the level in wild-type cells, but was blocked in
apg1 pho85
mutants. We propose that Snf1p and Pho85p are, respectively, positive and negative regulators of autophagy, probably via Apg1 and/or Apg13. Defective glycogen storage in
snf1
cells can be attributed to both defective synthesis upon entry into stationary phase and impaired maintenance of glycogen levels caused by the lack of autophagy.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
259 articles.
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