Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 3 de 3
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Mol Microbiol ; 98(6): 1051-72, 2015 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26303777

ABSTRACT

The Aspergillus nidulans PacC transcription factor mediates gene regulation in response to alkaline ambient pH which, signalled by the Pal pathway, results in the processing of PacC(72) to PacC(27) via PacC(53). Here we investigate two levels at which the pH regulatory system is transcriptionally moderated by pH and identify and characterise a new component of the pH regulatory machinery, PacX. Transcript level analysis and overexpression studies demonstrate that repression of acid-expressed palF, specifying the Pal pathway arrestin, probably by PacC(27) and/or PacC(53), prevents an escalating alkaline pH response. Transcript analyses using a reporter and constitutively expressed pacC trans-alleles show that pacC preferential alkaline-expression results from derepression by depletion of the acid-prevalent PacC(72) form. We additionally show that pacC repression requires PacX. pacX mutations suppress PacC processing recalcitrant mutations, in part, through derepressed PacC levels resulting in traces of PacC(27) formed by pH-independent proteolysis. pacX was cloned by impala transposon mutagenesis. PacX, with homologues within the Leotiomyceta, has an unusual structure with an amino-terminal coiled-coil and a carboxy-terminal zinc binuclear cluster. pacX mutations indicate the importance of these regions. One mutation, an unprecedented finding in A. nidulans genetics, resulted from an insertion of an endogenous Fot1-like transposon.


Subject(s)
Aspergillus nidulans/metabolism , Fungal Proteins/metabolism , Zinc Fingers , Amino Acid Sequence , Aspergillus nidulans/genetics , Binding Sites , DNA Transposable Elements , Fungal Proteins/chemistry , Fungal Proteins/genetics , Fungal Proteins/isolation & purification , Gene Expression Profiling , Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Mutagenesis , Mutation , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Signal Transduction , Zinc Fingers/genetics
2.
Eukaryot Cell ; 6(12): 2365-75, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17951518

ABSTRACT

The Aspergillus nidulans ambient pH signaling pathway involves two transmembrane domain (TMD)-containing proteins, PalH and PalI. We provide in silico and mutational evidence suggesting that PalI is a three TMD (3-TMD) protein with an N-terminal signal peptide, and we show that PalI localizes to the plasma membrane. PalI is not essential for the proteolytic conversion of the PacC translation product into the processed 27-kDa form, but its absence markedly reduces the accumulation of the 53-kDa intermediate after cells are shifted to an alkaline pH. PalI and its homologues contain a predicted luminal, conserved Gly-Cys-containing motif that distantly resembles a Gly-rich dimerization domain. The Gly44Arg and Gly47Asp substitutions within this motif lead to loss of function. The Gly47Asp substitution prevents plasma membrane localization of PalI-green fluorescent protein (GFP) and leads to its missorting into the multivesicular body pathway. Overexpression of the likely ambient alkaline pH receptor, the 7-TMD protein PalH, partially suppresses the null palI32 mutation. Although some PalH-GFP localizes to the plasma membrane, it predominates in internal membranes. However, the coexpression of PalI to stoichiometrically similar levels results in the strong predominance of PalH-GFP in the plasma membrane. Thus, one role for PalI, but possibly not the only role, is to assist with plasma membrane localization of PalH. These data, considered along with previous reports for both Saccharomyces cerevisiae and A. nidulans, strongly support the prevailing model of pH signaling involving two spatially segregated complexes: a plasma membrane complex containing PalH, PalI, and the arrestin-like protein PalF and an endosomal membrane complex containing PalA and PalB, to which PacC is recruited for its proteolytic activation.


Subject(s)
Aspergillus nidulans/metabolism , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/physiology , Alleles , Amino Acid Sequence , Dimerization , Endosomes/metabolism , Genetic Complementation Test , Green Fluorescent Proteins/metabolism , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Models, Biological , Molecular Sequence Data , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Signal Transduction
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 102(34): 12141-6, 2005 Aug 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16099830

ABSTRACT

Metazoan arrestins bind to seven-transmembrane (7TM) receptors to regulate function. Aspergillus nidulans PalF, a protein involved in the fungal ambient pH signaling pathway, contains arrestin N-terminal and C-terminal domains and binds strongly to two different regions within the C-terminal cytoplasmic tail of the 7TM, putative pH sensor PalH. Upon exposure to alkaline ambient pH, PalF is phosphorylated and, like mammalian beta-arrestins, ubiquitinated in a signal-dependent and 7TM protein-dependent manner. Substitution in PalF of a highly conserved arrestin N-terminal domain Ser residue prevents PalF-PalH interaction and pH signaling in vivo. Thus, PalF is the first experimentally documented fungal arrestin-related protein, dispelling the notion that arrestins are restricted to animal proteomes. Epistasis analyses demonstrate that PalF posttranslational modification is partially dependent on the 4TM protein PalI but independent of the remaining pH signal transduction pathway proteins PalA, PalB, and PalC, yielding experimental evidence bearing on the order of participation of the six components of the pH signal transduction pathway. Our data strongly implicate PalH as an ambient pH sensor, possibly with the cooperation of PalI.


Subject(s)
Arrestins/metabolism , Aspergillus nidulans/genetics , Fungal Proteins/metabolism , Signal Transduction/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Arrestins/genetics , DNA Mutational Analysis , Epistasis, Genetic , Glutathione Transferase , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Immunoblotting , Molecular Sequence Data , Phosphorylation , Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled/metabolism , Sequence Alignment , Two-Hybrid System Techniques , Ubiquitins
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...