The yeast galactose/melibiose regulon of S.cerevisiae is being studied as a model for transcription regulation in eukaryotes. In this system GAL4 protein dependent transcription is affected by an auxillary activator, GAL11, and two types of repression; repression due to the GAL80 protein, and repression due glucose catabolism. Galactose together with GAL3 protein triggers a rapid release from GAL80 repression but not from glucose repression. The goal is to determine how the galactose and glucose signaling systems and the GAL80 and GAL11 activities affect transcription. A major thrust will be to follow up on our recent discovery that the GAL4 protein undergoes regulated phosphorylation and dephosphorylation, and to test the hypothesis that such phosphorylation state changes are key to regulating the activity state of GAL4. Several highly interrelated lines are proposed. One line is to determine if GAL4 phosphorylation alters its DNA binding and/or transcription activation functions. Mutant GAL4 proteins having altered phosphorylation sites will be subjected to in vivo and in vitro assays to establish regulatory significance of the alterations. In another line, extracts from wildtype and mutant cells grown in noninducing, inducing, or repressing media will be challenged with GAL4 and GAL80 antisera to test in vivo-responsive GAL4/GAL80 association and dissociation predicted by the current model. The question here is: how does 80 block 4 activity? A third line is to determine the mechanisms whereby galactose and GAL3 trigger the relief of the 80 block. GAL3 and other possible proteins acting early in the induction will be assayed. A fourth line is to determine precisely how in response to carbon signals the GAL3, GAL80, and GAL11 proteins and the carbon catabolite response proteins modulate the physical state of GAL4. GAL4, GAL3, GAL80 and GAL11 antibodies will be used together with in vivo and in vitro assays to detect physical associations and activities. In closely related experiments the phosphorylation state of GAL4 from hxk2, snf1, snn6, gal82, and gal83 mutants will be determined using GAL4 antibody, electrophoresis, and phospho-a.a/peptide analyses. Within the overall context of these lines, a variety of genetic and molecular experiments will be focused on identifying the proteins that act directly on, or directly in concert with GAL4 protein to bring about carbon responsive alterations in GAL4 protein dependent transcription of gal/mel genes. The proposed research will generate new information on signal transduction, regulatory ciruitry, and mechanisms operative in this system. Such information will likely have conceptual relevance to other transcriptional regulatory systems including those in human cells.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01GM027925-13
Application #
3275148
Study Section
Molecular Biology Study Section (MBY)
Project Start
1979-09-01
Project End
1994-11-30
Budget Start
1991-12-01
Budget End
1992-11-30
Support Year
13
Fiscal Year
1992
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Pennsylvania State University
Department
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
129348186
City
Hershey
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
17033
Egriboz, Onur; Goswami, Sudip; Tao, Xiaorong et al. (2013) Self-association of the Gal4 inhibitor protein Gal80 is impaired by Gal3: evidence for a new mechanism in the GAL gene switch. Mol Cell Biol 33:3667-74
Hellman, Lance M; Zhao, Chunxia; Melikishvili, Manana et al. (2011) Histidine-tag-directed chromophores for tracer analyses in the analytical ultracentrifuge. Methods 54:31-8
Egriboz, Onur; Jiang, Fenglei; Hopper, James E (2011) Rapid GAL gene switch of Saccharomyces cerevisiae depends on nuclear Gal3, not nucleocytoplasmic trafficking of Gal3 and Gal80. Genetics 189:825-36
Jiang, Fenglei; Frey, Benjamin R; Evans, Margery L et al. (2009) Gene activation by dissociation of an inhibitor from a transcriptional activation domain. Mol Cell Biol 29:5604-10
Pilauri, Vepkhia; Bewley, Maria; Diep, Cuong et al. (2005) Gal80 dimerization and the yeast GAL gene switch. Genetics 169:1903-14
Carrozza, Michael J; John, Sam; Sil, Alok Kumar et al. (2002) Gal80 confers specificity on HAT complex interactions with activators. J Biol Chem 277:24648-52
Mylin, L M; Hopper, J E (1997) Inducible expression cassettes in yeast: GAL4. Methods Mol Biol 62:131-48
Blank, T E; Woods, M P; Lebo, C M et al. (1997) Novel Gal3 proteins showing altered Gal80p binding cause constitutive transcription of Gal4p-activated genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Mol Cell Biol 17:2566-75
Long, R M; Hopper, J E (1995) Genetic and carbon source regulation of phosphorylation of Sip1p, a Snf1p-associated protein involved in carbon response in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yeast 11:233-46
Mylin, L M; Bushman, V L; Long, R M et al. (1994) SIP1 is a catabolite repression-specific negative regulator of GAL gene expression. Genetics 137:689-700

Showing the most recent 10 out of 27 publications