» Articles » PMID: 14612437

Activation of the Saccharomyces Cerevisiae Heat Shock Transcription Factor Under Glucose Starvation Conditions by Snf1 Protein Kinase

Overview
Journal J Biol Chem
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 2003 Nov 13
PMID 14612437
Citations 78
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Heat shock transcription factor (HSF) is an evolutionarily conserved protein that mediates eukaryotic transcriptional responses to stress. Although the mammalian stress-responsive HSF1 isoform is activated in response to a wide array of seemingly unrelated stresses, including heat shock, pharmacological agents, infection and inflammation, little is known about the precise mechanisms or pathways by which this factor is activated by many stressors. The baker's yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes a single HSF protein that responds to heat stress and glucose starvation and provides a simple model system to investigate how a single HSF is activated by multiple stresses. Although induction of the HSF target gene CUP1 by glucose starvation is dependent on the Snf1 kinase, HSF-dependent heat shock induction of CUP1 is Snf1-independent. Approximately 165 in vivo targets for HSF have been identified in S. cerevisiae using chromatin immunoprecipitation combined with DNA microarrays. Interestingly, approximately 30% of the HSF direct target genes are also induced by the diauxic shift, in which glucose levels begin to be depleted. We demonstrate that HSF and Snf1 kinase interact in vivo and that HSF is a direct substrate for phosphorylation by Snf1 kinase in vitro. Furthermore, glucose starvation-dependent, but not heat shock-dependent HSF phosphorylation, and enhanced chromosomal HSF DNA binding to low affinity target promoters such as SSA3 and HSP30, occurred in a Snf1-dependent manner. Consistent with a more global role for HSF and Snf1 in activating gene expression in response to changes in glucose availability, expression of a subset of HSF targets by glucose starvation was dependent on Snf1 and the HSF carboxyl-terminal activation domain.

Citing Articles

Preserve or destroy: Orphan protein proteostasis and the heat shock response.

Ali A, Paracha S, Pincus D J Cell Biol. 2024; 223(12).

PMID: 39545954 PMC: 11572482. DOI: 10.1083/jcb.202407123.


The Yeast Protein Kinase Sch9 Functions as a Central Nutrient-Responsive Hub That Calibrates Metabolic and Stress-Related Responses.

Caligaris M, Sampaio-Marques B, Hatakeyama R, Pillet B, Ludovico P, De Virgilio C J Fungi (Basel). 2023; 9(8).

PMID: 37623558 PMC: 10455444. DOI: 10.3390/jof9080787.


Advances in Engineering for Xylose Fermentation and Biofuel Production: Balancing Growth, Metabolism, and Defense.

Wagner E, Gasch A J Fungi (Basel). 2023; 9(8).

PMID: 37623557 PMC: 10455348. DOI: 10.3390/jof9080786.


Transcription factors enhancing synthesis of recombinant proteins and resistance to stress in Yarrowia lipolytica.

Gorczyca M, Nicaud J, Celinska E Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 2023; 107(15):4853-4871.

PMID: 37318637 PMC: 10344991. DOI: 10.1007/s00253-023-12607-z.


Performing in spite of starvation: How Saccharomyces cerevisiae maintains robust growth when facing famine zones in industrial bioreactors.

Minden S, Aniolek M, Noorman H, Takors R Microb Biotechnol. 2022; 16(1):148-168.

PMID: 36479922 PMC: 9803336. DOI: 10.1111/1751-7915.14188.