Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, The Pennsylvania State University, Hershey, Pennsylvania, 17033-2390
Abstract
ABSTRACT
To investigate the mechanism of action of volatile anesthetics, we are studying mutants of the yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
that have altered sensitivity to isoflurane, a widely used clinical anesthetic. Several lines of evidence from these studies implicate a role for ubiquitin metabolism in cellular response to volatile anesthetics: (i) mutations in the
ZZZ1
gene render cells resistant to isoflurane, and the
ZZZ1
gene is identical to
BUL1
(binds ubiquitin ligase), which appears to be involved in the ubiquitination pathway; (ii)
ZZZ4
, which we previously found is involved in anesthetic response, is identical to the
DOA1/UFD3
gene, which was identified based on altered degradation of ubiquitinated proteins; (iii) analysis of
zzz1Δ zzz4Δ
double mutants suggests that these genes encode products involved in the same pathway for anesthetic response since the double mutant is no more resistant to anesthetic than either of the single mutant parents; (iv) ubiquitin ligase (
MDP1/RSP5
) mutants are altered in their response to isoflurane; and (v) mutants with decreased proteasome activity are resistant to isoflurane. The
ZZZ1
and
MDP1/RSP5
gene products appear to play important roles in determining effective anesthetic dose in yeast since increased levels of either gene increases isoflurane sensitivity whereas decreased activity decreases sensitivity. Like
zzz4
strains,
zzz1
mutants are resistant to all five volatile anesthetics tested, suggesting there are similarities in the mechanisms of action of a variety of volatile anesthetics in yeast and that ubiquitin metabolism affects response to all the agents examined.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology
Cited by
19 articles.
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