Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, University of Texas Medical School, Houston, Texas 77030
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Organisms rapidly adapt to severe environmental stress by inducing the expression of a wide array of heat shock proteins as part of a larger cellular response program. We have used a genomics approach to identify novel heat shock-induced genes in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
. The uncharacterized open reading frame (ORF)
YLR251W
was found to be required for both metabolism and tolerance of ethanol during heat shock.
YLR251W
has significant homology to the mammalian peroxisomal membrane protein Mpv17, and Mpv17
−/−
mice exhibit age-onset glomerulosclerosis, deafness, hypertension, and, ultimately, death by renal failure. Expression of Mpv17 in
ylr251w
Δ cells complements the 37°C ethanol growth defect, suggesting that these proteins are functional orthologs. We have therefore renamed ORF
YLR251W
as
SYM1
(for “stress-inducible yeast Mpv17”). In contrast to the peroxisomal localization of Mpv17, we find that Sym1 is an integral membrane protein of the inner mitochondrial membrane. In addition, transcriptional profiling of
sym1
Δ cells uncovered changes in gene expression, including dysregulation of a number of ethanol-repressed genes, exclusively at 37°C relative to wild-type results. Together, these data suggest an important metabolic role for Sym1 in mitochondrial function during heat shock. Furthermore, this study establishes Sym1 as a potential model for understanding the role of Mpv17 in kidney disease and cardiovascular biology.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Microbiology
Cited by
57 articles.
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