Down-regulation of the expression of PKC1 and SRB1/PSA1/VIG9, two genes involved in cell wall integrity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, causes flocculation

Nianshu Zhang, David C J Gardner, Stephen G. Oliver, Lubomira I. Stateva

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    The cell wall integrity determinants PKC1 and SRB1/PSA1/VIG9 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were expressed under the control of the tightly regulated promoter pMET3. Substitution of the cell-cycle-regulated SRB1/PSA1 native promoter with pMET3 led to faster cell growth, larger cell volumes, and a twofold reduction of the steady-state SRB1/PSA1 mRNA level. In addition, the new pattern of expression of SRB1/PSA1 resulted in a dominant flocculation phenotype at all phases of batch growth. By contrast expression of PKC1 from pMET3 increased the flocculation capacity of cells only at stationary phase. Methionine-mediated repression of either PSA1/SRB1 or PKC1 resulted in enhanced cell clumping. Cells in which both these genes had been replaced with their respective pMET3-regulated cassettes were highly flocculent under both expression and repression conditions. These results suggest that greater exposure of flocculin on the cell surface, caused by either cell wall distortion (through depletion of Pkc1p) or aberrant regulation of mannosylation (through constitutive production of Srb1p), results in an increased flocculation ability.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)309-316
    Number of pages7
    JournalMicrobiology
    Volume145
    Issue number2
    Publication statusPublished - Feb 1999

    Keywords

    • Cell wall
    • MET3 promoter
    • PKC1
    • SRB1/PSA1
    • Yeast flocculation

    Research Beacons, Institutes and Platforms

    • Manchester Institute of Biotechnology

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