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Incapability of Utilizing Galactose by pgs1 Mutation Occurred on the Galactose Incorporation Step in Saccharomyces cerevisiae  

Rho, Min-Suk (Research Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Seoul National University, Medicinal Resources Research Institute, Wonkwang University)
Su, Xuefeng (Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Texas-Houston Medical School)
Lee, Yoon-Shik (Department of Endocrinology, University of Pennsylvania Medical School)
Kim, Woo-Ho (Cancer Research Institute, Seoul National University College of Medicine)
Dowhan, William (Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Texas-Houston Medical School)
Publication Information
Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology / v.16, no.1, 2006 , pp. 84-91 More about this Journal
Abstract
A Saccharomyces cerevisiae pgs1 nulI mutant, which is deficient with phosphatidyl glycerol (PG) and cardiolipin (CL) biosynthesis, grows well on most fermentable carbon sources, but fails to grow on non-fermentable carbon sources such as glycerol, ethanol, and lactate. This mutant also cannot grow on galactose medium as the sole carbon source. We found that the incorporation of $[^{14}C]-galactose$, which is the first step of the galactose metabolic pathway (Leloir pathway), into the pgs 1 null mutant cell was extremely repressed. Exogenously expressed PGS1 (YCpPGS1) under indigenous promoter could completely restore the pgs1 growth defect on non-fermentable carbon sources, and dramatically recovered $[^{14}C]-galactose$ incorporation into the pgs1 mutant cell. However, PGS1 expression under the GALl promoter $(YEpP_{GAL1}-PGS1myc)$ could not complement pgs1 mutation, and the GAL2-lacZ fusion gene $(YEpP_{GAL2}-lacZ)$ also did not exhibit its $\beta-galactosidase$ activity in the pgs1 mutant. In wild-type yeast, antimycin $A(1\;{\mu}g/ml)$, which inhibits mitochondrial complex III, severely repressed not only the expression of the GAL2-lacZ fusion gene, but also uptake of $[^{14}C]-galactose$. However, exogenously expressed PGS1 partially relieved these inhibitory effects of antimycin A in both the pgs1 mutant and wild-type yeast, although it could not basically restore the growth defect on galactose by antimycin A. These results suggest that the PGSI gene product has an important role in utilization of galactose by Gal genes, and that intact mitochondrial function with PGS1 should be required for galactose incorporation into the Leloir pathway. The PGS1 gene might provide a clue to resolve the historic issue about the incapability of galactose with deteriorated mitochondrial function.
Keywords
Yeast; PGS1; phosphatidylglycerol; cardiolipin; galactose; metabolism; mitochondria;
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