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Eukaryotic Cell, September 2006, p. 1560-1570, Vol. 5, No. 9
1535-9778/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/EC.00161-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Cell Biology, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland
Received 2 June 2006/ Accepted 5 July 2006
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae mating pheromone a-factor
provides a paradigm for understanding the biogenesis of prenylated
fungal pheromones. The biogenesis of a-factor involves multiple
steps: (i) C-terminal CAAX modification (where C is cysteine, A is
aliphatic, and X is any residue) which includes prenylation,
proteolysis, and carboxymethylation (by Ram1p/Ram2p, Ste24p or Rce1p,
and Ste14p, respectively); (ii) N-terminal processing, involving two
sequential proteolytic cleavages (by Ste24p and Axl1p); and (iii)
nonclassical export (by Ste6p). Once exported, mature a-factor
interacts with the Ste3p receptor on MAT
cells to
stimulate mating. The a-factor biogenesis machinery is well
defined, as is the CAAX motif that directs C-terminal modification;
however, very little is known about the sequence determinants within
a-factor required for N-terminal processing, activity, and
export. Here we generated a large collection of a-factor mutants
and identified residues critical for the N-terminal processing steps
mediated by Ste24p and Axl1p. We also identified mutants that fail to
support mating but do not affect biogenesis or export, suggesting a
defective interaction with the Ste3p receptor. Mutants significantly
impaired in export were also found, providing evidence that the Ste6p
transporter recognizes sequence determinants as well as CAAX
modifications. We also performed a phenotypic analysis of the entire
set of isogenic a-factor biogenesis machinery mutants, which
revealed information about the dependency of biogenesis steps upon one
another, and demonstrated that export by Ste6p requires the completion
of all processing events. Overall, this comprehensive analysis will
provide a useful framework for the study of other fungal pheromones, as
well as prenylated metazoan proteins involved in development and
aging.
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