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Defects in protein glycosylation cause SHO1-dependent activation of a STE12 signaling pathway in yeast

  • Paul J. Cullen
  • , Janet Schultz
  • , Joe Horecka
  • , Brian J. Stevenson
  • , Yoshifumi Jigami
  • , George F. Sprague
  • University of Oregon
  • Oregon State Police Forensic Lab.
  • National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
  • Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

110 Scopus citations

Abstract

In haploid Saccharomyces cerevisiae, mating occurs by activation of the pheromone response pathway. A genetic selection for mutants that activate this pathway uncovered a class of mutants defective in cell wall integrity. Partial loss-of-function alleles of PGI1, PMI40, PSA1, DPM1, ALG1, MNN10, SPT14, and OCH1, genes required for mannose utilization and protein glycosylation, activated a pheromone-response-pathway-dependent reporter (FUS1) in cells lacking a basal signal (ste4). Pathway activation was suppressed by the addition of mannose to hexose isomerase mutants pgi1-101 and pmi40-101, which bypassed the requirement for mannose biosynthesis in these mutants. Pathway activation was also suppressed in dpm1-101 mutants by plasmids that contained RER2 or PSA1, which produce the substrates for Dpm1. Activation of FUS1 transcription in the mannose utilization/protein glycosylation mutants required some but not all proteins from three different signaling pathways: the pheromone response, invasive growth, and HOG pathways. We specifically suggest that a Sho1 → Ste20/Ste50 → Ste11 → Ste7 → Kss1 → Ste12 pathway is responsible for activation of FUS1 transcription in these mutants. Because loss of pheromone response pathway components leads to a synthetic growth defect in mannose utilization/protein glycosylation mutants, we suggest that the Sho1 → Ste12 pathway contributes to maintenance of cell wall integrity in vegetative cells.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1005-1018
Number of pages14
JournalGenetics
Volume155
Issue number3
StatePublished - Jul 2000

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