Affiliation:
1. Division of Cellular and Molecular Medicine and Department of Biology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California at San Diego School of Medicine, La Jolla, California 92093-0668
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A genetic screen to isolate gene products required for vacuolar morphogenesis in the yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
identified
VAM7
, a gene which encodes a protein containing a predicted coiled-coil domain homologous to the coiled-coil domain of the neuronal t-SNARE, SNAP-25 (Y. Wada and Y. Anraku, J. Biol. Chem. 267:18671–18675, 1992; T. Weimbs, S. H. Low, S. J. Chapin, K. E. Mostov, P. Bucher, and K. Hofmann, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94:3046–3051, 1997). Analysis of a temperature-sensitive-for-function (
tsf
) allele of
VAM7
(
vam7
tsf
) demonstrated that the
VAM7
gene product directly functions in vacuolar protein transport.
vam7
tsf
mutant cells incubated at the nonpermissive temperature displayed rapid defects in the delivery of multiple proteins that traffic to the vacuole via distinct biosynthetic pathways. Examination of
vam7
tsf
cells at the nonpermissive temperature by electron microscopy revealed the accumulation of aberrant membranous compartments that may represent unfused transport intermediates. A fraction of Vam7p was localized to vacuolar membranes. Furthermore,
VAM7
displayed genetic interactions with the vacuolar syntaxin homolog,
VAM3
. Consistent with the genetic results, Vam7p physically associated in a complex containing Vam3p, and this interaction was enhanced by inactivation of the yeast NSF (
N
-ethyl maleimide-sensitive factor) homolog, Sec18p. In addition to the coiled-coil domain, Vam7p also contains a putative NADPH oxidase p40
phox
(PX) domain. Changes in two conserved amino acids within this domain resulted in synthetic phenotypes when combined with the
vam3
tsf
mutation, suggesting that the PX domain is required for Vam7p function. This study provides evidence for the functional and physical interaction between Vam7p and Vam3p at the vacuolar membrane, where they function as part of a t-SNARE complex required for the docking and/or fusion of multiple transport intermediates destined for the vacuole.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
174 articles.
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