Reference - PMID:8825100 - Osmoregulation of fission yeast: cloning of two distinct genes encoding glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, one of which is responsible for osmotolerance for growth.
Reference summary
- PubMed ID
- PMID:8825100
- Title
- Osmoregulation of fission yeast: cloning of two distinct genes encoding glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, one of which is responsible for osmotolerance for growth.
- Authors
- Ohmiya R, Yamada H, Nakashima K, Aiba H, Mizuno T
- Citation
- Mol Microbiol 1995 Dec;18(5):963-73
- Publication year
- 1995
- Abstract
- Many types of microorganisms, including both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, have developed mechanisms to adapt to severe osmotic stress. In this study, we isolated multicopy suppressor genes for a Schizosaccharomyces pombe mutant, which exhibited the clear phenotype of being osmosensitive for growth (Osms) on agar plates containing high concentrations of either non-ionic or ionic osmotic solutes. Two genes were thus identified, and each was suggested to encode an NADH-dependent glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPD), which is required for glycerol synthesis. The nucleotide sequences, determined for these genes (named gpd1+ and gpd2+, respectively), revealed that S. pombe has two distinct GPD isozymes. They are only 60% identical to each other in their amino acid sequences. One such isozyme, GPD1, was shown to be directly involved in osmoregulation, based on the following observations. (i) Expression of gpd1+ was regulated at the mRNA level in response to osmotic upshift. (ii) It was demonstrated that wild-type cells markedly accumulated internal glycerol under high-osmolarity growth conditions. (iii) delta gpd1 mutants, however, failed to do so even in a high-osmolarity medium, and thus exhibited an Osms phenotype. On the other hand, the gpd2+ gene was constitutively expressed at a particular low level, regardless of the osmolarity of the medium.
Annotation
Qualitative gene expression