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Eukaryotic Cell, August 2003, p. 729-736, Vol. 2, No. 4
1535-9778/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/EC.2.4.729-736.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
and J. Patton-Vogt1*
Department of Biological Sciences, Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15282,1 Department of Biological Sciences, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 152132
Received 5 November 2002/ Accepted 29 April 2003
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). We now report that S. cerevisiae also uses exogenous phosphatidylinositol as an inositol source. Evidence suggests that phosphatidylinositol is deacylated to glycerophosphoinositol extracellularly before being transported across the plasma membrane by Git1p. A genetic screen identified Pho86p, which is required for targeting of the major phosphate transporter (Pho84p) to the plasma membrane, as affecting the utilization of phosphatidylinositol and glycerophosphoinositol. Deletion of PHO86 in an ino1
strain resulted in faster growth when either phosphatidylinositol or glycerophosphoinositol was supplied as the sole inositol source. The incorporation of radiolabeled glycerophosphoinositol into an ino1
pho86
mutant was higher than that into wild-type, ino1
, and pho86
strains. All strains accumulated the most GIT1 transcript when incubated in media limited for inositol and phosphate in combination. However, the ino1
pho86
mutant accumulated approximately threefold more GIT1 transcript than did the other strains when incubated in inositol-free media containing either high or low concentrations of Pi. Deletion of PHO4 abolished GIT1 transcription in a wild-type strain. These results indicate that the transport of glycerophosphoinositol by Git1p is regulated by factors affecting both inositol and phosphate availabilities and suggest a regulatory connection between phosphate metabolism and phospholipid metabolism. |
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Starvation for phosphate (Pi) in S. cerevisiae results in the coordinated induction of a set of phosphatase genes (PHO5, PHO10, and PHO11) and the structural gene for low-Km Pi transport, PHO84 (11, 17). The phosphoinositol (PHO) system is comprised of five regulatory genes: PHO2, PHO4, PHO80, PHO81, and PHO85. The induction of PHO gene transcription during phosphate starvation is mediated by Pho4p, a bHLH transcription factor, and Pho2p, a homeobox DNA binding protein. The transcriptional status of PHO5, a gene whose product supplies more than 90% of the acid phosphatase activity, is typically used as a marker for the entire PHO system. Pho4p binds to two bHLH consensus sequences (CANNTG) in the PHO5 promoter, and Pho2p binds cooperatively with Pho4p (8). In high-Pi medium, Pho80p and Pho85p form a kinase complex, similar to that formed by a cyclin and a cyclin-dependent protein kinase, which hyperphosphorylates and inhibits Pho4p function, thereby blocking PHO5 transcription (16). In low-Pi medium, Pho81p inhibits the Pho80p-Pho85p complex and allows the transcription of PHO5 (25). PHO5 and the other repressible acid phosphatase (rAPase) genes are constitutively expressed in strains bearing mutations in PHO84, the low-Km Pi transport gene. Other genes thought to be involved in Pi transport include pho87, pho88, pho89, pho90, and pho91 (4, 21, 28). Pho86p is an endoplasmic reticulum protein that is required for the transport of Pho84p to the plasma membrane (9). Strains bearing mutations in PHO86 show constitutive rAPase activity and reduced Pi transport.
The transport of exogenously supplied GroPIns through Git1p supports the growth of an inositol auxotroph (ino1
), thus defining the Git+ phenotype (20). We now report that an ino1
mutant can also grow when PI is supplied as the source of inositol, a phenotype that we have termed Pit+. Genetic and biochemical studies indicate that GIT1 transcription and Git1p transport activity are regulated by factors affecting inositol and phosphate availabilities, revealing a metabolic link between phospholipid metabolism and phosphate metabolism.
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TABLE 1. Strains
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FIG. 1. Deletion of PHO86 results in enhanced growth of an ino1 strain in GroPIns-containing and PI-containing media. Strains were grown on synthetic media containing I+ (A), no inositol source (I-) (B), 75 mM GroPIns (G+) (C), and 75 mM PI (PI+) (D). At the indicated times, the A600 was measured. Data for wild-type (wt), git1 , pho86 , and pho86 git1 strains are shown only in panel B.
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FIG. 2. Growth of an ino1 mutant on PI requires one or more PLB gene products. Strains were grown on synthetic media containing 75 mM PI, a source of inositol. At the indicated times, the A600 was measured.
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TABLE 2. Incorporation of radiolabeled GroPInsa
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FIG. 3. GIT1 transcripts accumulate in a wild-type strain limited for phosphate and inositol. A wild-type strain (JPV91) was grown in media containing (I+) or lacking (I-) 75 mM inositol and containing 0.2 mM (low Pi) or 10 mM (high Pi) inorganic phosphate. Cells were harvested in the logarithmic phase, and Northern analysis was performed with digoxigenin-labeled probes for GIT1 and control (SNR17) transcripts as described in Materials and Methods.
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FIG. 4. An ino1 pho86 mutant overexpresses GIT1, as measured by chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) activity. Cultures transformed with plasmid pCA998 were grown in high-Pi, I+ medium lacking tryptophan and were used to inoculate each of the following media lacking tryptophan: low Pi, I-; low Pi, I+; high Pi, I-; and high Pi, I+. Following three to five generations of growth, lysates obtained by glass bead breakage were assayed for chloramphenicol acetyltransferase activity as described in Materials and Methods. Reactions were carried out for 2.5 h with 5 to 25 µg of protein per assay. Data represent at least three separate determinations and standard errors of the means. wt, wild type.
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FIG. 5. Pho4p is required for GIT1 expression but not INO1 expression. (A) Strains (JPV203, JPV296, and JPV339) transformed with plasmid pCA999 were grown in high-Pi, I+ medium lacking leucine and were used to inoculate high-Pi, I- and high-Pi, I+ media lacking leucine. Following three to five generations of growth, lysates obtained by glass bead breakage were assayed for chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) activity as described in Materials and Methods. Reactions were carried out for 2.5 h with 5 to 25 µg of protein per assay. (B) Strains (see above) transformed with plasmid pJH359 (INO1-CYC1-lacZ) were grown in high-Pi, I+ medium lacking uracil and were used to inoculate high-Pi, I- and high-Pi, I+ media lacking uracil. Following three to five generations of growth, cells were assayed for ß-galactosidase activity by using the Pierce yeast ß-galactosidase assay kit. Data represent at least three separate determinations and standard errors of the means. wt, wild type; OD600, optical density at 600 nm.
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Genetic screen for colonies showing fast growth on PI and isolation of PHO86. The strain auxotrophic for inositol (JPV3) was transformed to leucine prototrophy with a YEp13-based genomic library. Cells were spread onto plates lacking leucine and incubated at 30°C for 2 days. Colonies were replica plated on synthetic media lacking inositol (I-), containing 75 µM inositol (I+), and lacking inositol but containing 75 µM PI. After 3 to 4 days of incubation at 30°C, colonies showing fast growth on plates containing 75 µM PI but unable to grow on I- plates were selected. Of the 10,000 transformants obtained, 6 displayed increased growth on PI. The plasmids were recovered from yeast cells, amplified in Escherichia coli, and retransformed into the parent strain (JPV3) to verify that the plasmids were responsible for the fast growth phenotype. The six plasmids were assorted into two groups based upon restriction fragment mapping. Representative plasmids from each group were sequenced with an ABI Prism 377 automatic DNA sequencer (University of Pittsburgh Research Support Facilities). The open reading frames contained on the complementing plasmids were analyzed by using the Saccharomyces Genome Database. One set of complementing plasmids contained the GIT1 gene. The GIT1 gene was cloned into multicopy vector pRS424 to produce plasmid pJP104. When transformed with pJP104, strain JPV3 displayed faster growth on PI. The second set of complementing plasmids contained the PHO86 gene. A 2,177-bp SalI-SpeI fragment containing the entire PHO86 gene was cloned into pRS424 to produce plasmid pJP201. When transformed with pJP201, strain JPV3 displayed faster growth on PI.
Construction of PHO86 disruption alleles. A 1,641-bp HpaI-SphI fragment containing the entire PHO86 gene (-568 to 140 bp after the stop codon) was removed from plasmid pJP201 and replaced with a 1,333-bp SphI-NarI fragment containing the URA3 gene to produce plasmid pJP203. Digestion of pJP203 with SalI and SpeI produced a linear fragment containing the URA3 gene flanked by sequences corresponding to 62 nucleotides at the 5' end and 474 nucleotides at the 3' end of PHO86. The SalI-SpeI fragment was used for transformation into strain JPV22 by a one-step gene disruption procedure. Uracil prototrophs were screened by PCR to verify integration at the PHO86 locus, and the resulting strain was named JPV90.
Bacterial and yeast transformations. Bacterial strains were transformed with plasmid DNA by using calcium chloride (24), and yeast strains were transformed by using lithium acetate (24).
3H-GroPIns incorporation. Cell cultures (JPV91, JPV93, JPV95, and JPV99) grown overnight in high-Pi, I+ synthetic medium were harvested and used to inoculate 5 ml of each of the following media, all of which contained 50 µM glycerophospho-myo-[2-3H]inositol (3H-GroPIns) (American Radiolabeled Chemicals Inc.): low Pi, I-; low Pi, I+; high Pi, I-; and high Pi, I+. After three to five generations, 0.5-ml aliquots of the cultures were centrifuged, and the resulting pellets and supernatants were subjected to liquid scintillation counting by using a Beckman LS5801 counter with Ecolume liquid scintillation cocktail (ICN Biomedicals). Strains bearing mutations in the INO1 gene grew for approximately three generations in I- media by using their internal reserves of inositol.
Northern analysis. Wild-type cells (JPV91) pregrown in high-Pi, I+ medium were used to inoculate each of the following media: low Pi, I-; low Pi, I+; high Pi, I-; and high Pi, I+. Cells were harvested in the logarithmic phase, and RNA was extracted by using the hot acid phenol method (6). RNA was separated on a 1% agarose gel, transferred to a positively charged nylon membrane (Roche catalog no. 1-209-299) by blotting, and UV cross-linked to the membrane by using a Stratalinker. Digoxigenin (DIG)-labeled probes for GIT1 and control (SNR17) transcripts were made by using a Roche PCR DIG probe synthesis kit (catalog no. 1-636-090). Prehybridization, hybridization, and detection were performed in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions for a Roche DIG luminescence detection kit (catalog no. 1-363-514).
CAT assays. Cultures (JPV91, JPV93, JPV95, and JPV99 for Fig. 4; JPV203, JPV296, and JPV339 for Fig. 5) pregrown in high-Pi, I+ medium were harvested and used to inoculate the following media: low Pi, I-; low Pi, I+; high Pi, I-; and high Pi, I+. Following three to five generations of growth, lysates were obtained by glass bead breakage (2). The total protein concentration of each lysate was determined with bicinchoninic acid reagent (27). CAT assays were performed in accordance with the manufacturer's protocol for a FAST CAT green (deoxy) CAT assay kit (Molecular Probes catalog no. F-6616). Reactions were carried out for 2.5 h with 5 to 25 µg of protein per assay. Silica gel-coated thin-layer chromatography plates containing the separated reaction products were analyzed by using Kodak Image Station 440.
ß-Galactosidase assays. Strains (JPV203, JPV296, and JPV339) were transformed to uracil prototrophy with a plasmid (pJH359) bearing an INO1-CYC1-lacZ fusion (12). Cells grown to mid-logarithmic phase in high-Pi, I+ or in high-Pi, I- medium were assayed for ß-galactosidase activity by using a Pierce Chemical Company yeast ß-galactosidase assay kit.
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mutant in GroPIns- and PI-containing medium.
S. cerevisiae can use exogenous GroPIns as a source of inositol (20). As shown in Fig. 1, S. cerevisiae can also use exogenous PI (the precursor of GroPIns) as a source of inositol, albeit with a lag time even greater than that required for growth on GroPIns. In an attempt to identify factors involved in the breakdown and/or utilization of PI and GroPIns by S. cerevisiae, a gene overexpression scheme was used. A strain auxotrophic for inositol (ino1
) was transformed with a high-copy-number YEp13-based genomic library. Transformants displaying an increased growth rate when PI was supplied as the inositol source were chosen. Plasmids bearing two different genes were shown to confer the increased growth rate. Those genes were GIT1 and PHO86.
To discern the role of Pho86p in exogenous PI deacylation and GroPIns utilization, pho86
and pho86
ino1
strains were constructed. The pho86
ino1
strain grew faster on both GroPIns and PI than the ino1
strain, and this growth was, in all instances, dependent upon Git1p (Fig. 1C and D). In fact, the pho86
ino1
strain (unlike the ino1
strain) grew at identical rates when supplied with either inositol or GroPIns as an inositol source (compare Fig. 1A and C). The increased growth rate of the pho86
ino1
strain on PI was unexpected, since multicopy PHO86 caused an increased growth rate in the original selection. However, others have reported instances in which overexpression and deletion of the PHO86 gene result in equivalent phenotypes. Those phenotypes include reduced Pi uptake (4) and the ability to produce rAPase activity under high-Pi conditions (29). Thus, our findings are consistent with other reports and consistent with the notion that both deletion and overexpression of PHO86 result in a phosphate starvation response. Surprisingly, the pho86
ino1
strain grew more slowly than the ino1
strain when inositol was supplied, but the pho86
git1
ino1
strain grew at the same rate as the ino1
strain. This result held true outside of an ino1
genetic background: a pho86
strain grew more slowly than a wild-type strain, but a pho86
git1
strain grew at the same rate as a wild-type strain. These complicated growth phenotypes are a further indication of a functional interaction between Git1p and Pho86p. As expected, strains bearing a deletion in INO1 were unable to grow in the absence of an inositol source (Fig. 1B). Strains bearing an intact INO1 gene (git1
, pho86
, and pho86
git1
) grew similarly in the absence of inositol (Fig. 1B) as in medium containing PI or GroPIns (data not shown).
PI must be deacylated to GroPIns extracellularly to support the growth of an ino1 mutant.
The finding that an ino1
mutant can grow on exogenous PI only when functional Git1p is present suggested that PI is first deacylated to GroPIns before it is transported into the cell. In order to provide further evidence for this hypothesis, we analyzed strains bearing mutations in the three phospholipase B (PLB) genes that have been characterized for S. cerevisiae (10, 14). Plb1p1 and Plb3p are predicted to reside in the plasma membrane and the extracellular space, and Plb2p is predicted to reside in the extracellular space (14). The role of the PLB homologs in exogenous PI deacylation was assessed by monitoring the growth of strains bearing deletions in INO1 in combination with deletions in the PLB homolog genes when PI was supplied as the inositol source (Fig. 2). The ino1
plb1
, ino1
plb2
, and ino1
plb3
strains grew at rates similar to that of the ino1
strain in this experiment. However, two different ino1
plb1
plb2
strains and the ino1
plb1
plb2
plb3
strain grew more slowly and to a lower density than the ino1
strain. These results demonstrate that at least one PLB gene product is necessary for the deacylation of exogenous PI to GroPIns.
An ino1
pho86
mutant incorporates high levels of exogenous 3H-GroPIns into cells.
The increased growth of the ino1
pho86
mutant on GroPIns and PI (Fig. 1) indicated that the PHO86 gene product and, possibly, the phosphate concentration might affect GroPIns transport. To measure 3H-GroPIns incorporation, strains (wild type, ino1
, pho86
, and ino1
pho86
) pregrown in high-Pi, I+ medium were used to inoculate four separate media, each containing 50 µM 3H-GroPIns (Table 2): low Pi, I-; low Pi, I+; high Pi, I-; and high Pi, I+. These experiments were designed to measure 3H-GroPIns transport activity as a function of inositol and phosphate availabilities prior to the utilization of GroPIns as an inositol source. Thus, the cells were harvested and subjected to scintillation counting after three to five generations of growth (under our experimental conditions, strains carrying ino1
will double approximately three times in I- medium by using their internal reserves of inositol).
The ino1
pho86
strain exhibited greatly increased levels of GroPIns incorporation per cell density compared to the wild-type, ino1
, and pho86
strains (Table 2, experiment 1). While the levels of incorporation were not vastly different depending upon the media used, all strains showed the lowest level of incorporation in high-Pi, I+ medium. When a wild-type strain was grown to a high density (24 h of incubation), the total incorporation of the label varied according to the growth conditions in the following order (highest to lowest): low Pi, I-; low Pi, I+; high Pi, I-; and high Pi, I+ (Table 2, experiment 2).
GIT1 expression is sensitive to both inositol and phosphate limitations, and an ino1
pho86
mutant overexpresses GIT1.
Northern analysis of a wild-type strain indicated that the GIT1 transcript was most highly expressed under conditions in which both inositol and phosphate were limiting (Fig. 3). A much lower level of GIT1 expression also occurred in media in which inositol was limiting but phosphate was not and in media in which phosphate was limiting but inositol was not.
In order to facilitate the expression analysis, a plasmid in which the promoter region of GIT1 was fused to the bacterial cat reporter gene in vector yCp7-32cat was constructed (13). CAT activity was determined for wild-type, ino1
, pho86
, and ino1
pho86
strains which were grown initially in high-Pi, I+ medium and then transferred to four different media which varied in inositol and phosphate concentrations (Fig. 4). In agreement with the results of the Northern analysis, all strains exhibited the most CAT activity when incubated in media limited for both inositol and phosphate. However, an ino1
pho86
mutant displayed approximately threefold more CAT activity than the wild-type strain in I- medium containing both high and low levels of phosphate, suggesting that GIT1 transcription was hyperinduced.
GIT1 promoter-driven CAT activity requires Pho4p. As a first approach to dissecting the regulatory systems involved in controlling GIT1 transcription, GIT1 promoter-driven CAT activity was measured for strains bearing deletion mutations in the transcription factors encoded by PHO4 and INO2 (Fig. 5A). In high-Pi, I+ or high-Pi, I- medium, Pho4p appeared to be required for CAT activity. Under the same growth conditions, strains bearing a deletion in INO2 displayed decreased CAT activity. The requirement of Pho4p for GIT1 transcription was specific, as Pho4p was not required for INO1 promoter-driven ß-galactosidase activity (Fig. 5B). As expected, INO1 expression required Ino2p (Fig. 5B).
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mutant in PI-containing medium requires GIT1 (Fig. 1D), and GIT1 was isolated in the genetic screen as a multicopy suppressor of the slow-growth phenotype of an ino1
mutant growing in PI-containing medium. Furthermore, the growth of an ino1
mutant in PI-containing medium requires one or more PLB gene products (Fig. 2); the PLB gene products reside in the extracellular space (14) and hydrolyze phospholipids to produce glycerophosphodiesters, such as GroPIns. Finally, inositol auxotrophic strains that display a Git- phenotype (spt7 and ino2) (20) also display a Pit- phenotype (data not shown). Our prior studies on the regulation of GroPIns transport were performed with media containing high levels of phosphate. Using those conditions, we confirmed that GroPIns transport is regulated by inositol availability (Table 2, compare columns 3 and 4). As an extension of those findings, we now report roles for both inositol and phosphate availabilities in regulating GIT1 transcription (Fig. 3 and 4) and GroPIns transport (Table 2). In a wild-type strain, the upregulation of GIT1 transcription in response to inositol limitation is greatly enhanced when phosphate is limiting, just as the upregulation of GIT1 transcription in response to phosphate limitation is greatly enhanced when inositol is limiting (Fig. 3 and 4). With regard to GroPIns uptake in a wild-type strain, more total 3H-GroPIns is accumulated when cells are grown in low-Pi media as opposed to high-Pi media (Table 2, experiment 2), and that accumulation is increased further by inositol limitation.
Analysis of the ino1
pho86
mutant has provided more insight into the regulation of GroPIns utilization. Although the ino1
pho86
strain grows slowly in inositol-containing media (Fig. 1A), it displays virtually the same growth rate when grown in GroPIns-containing media (Fig. 1C). This behavior is in stark contrast to that of the ino1
strain, whose lag phase is greatly lengthened in GroPIns-containing media compared to inositol-containing media (Fig. 1A and C). These results suggest that GroPIns transport and/or catabolism are constitutive in the double mutant. Indeed, GroPIns incorporation is constitutively high, although still regulated by inositol and phosphate, in the ino1
pho86
strain (Table 2). Similarly, GIT1 transcript accumulation in inositol-free media is much higher in the ino1
pho86
strain than in any other strain tested. The fact that GIT1 transcript accumulation in the ino1
pho86
strain is similar to that in the wild-type strain grown in I+ media, while 3H-GroPIns accumulation is much higher, suggests that the regulation of GroPIns accumulation does not occur solely at the level of GIT1 transcription. Other possible control points affecting GroPIns accumulation include GIT1 mRNA degradation, Git1p degradation, Git1p transport activity, and the steps involved in the catabolism of GroPIns and its subsequent utilization for de novo PI synthesis. These possibilities are currently under investigation.
Interestingly, both the ino1
pho86
(Fig. 1) and the pho86
(data not shown) strains exhibit a slow-growth phenotype that is alleviated by the deletion of GIT1. Strains lacking Pho86p show constitutive rAPase activity and are unable to efficiently transport Pho84p to the plasma membrane (9). Similarly, pho84
mutants show constitutive rAPase activity and have no Pho84p. As an initial attempt to dissect these complex phenotypes, we will examine whether the deletion of GIT1 in a pho84
mutant (and in strains carrying mutations in other PHO genes) affects growth, as it does in a pho86
background.
In terms of GroPIns incorporation and GIT1 transcript accumulation, the ino1
pho86
mutant behaves in a manner much different from that of either the ino1
or the pho86
mutant alone and different from that of the wild-type strain grown in media limited for inositol and phosphate. This finding suggests a synergistic role for inositol and phosphate in regulating the utilization of GroPIns. Furthermore, it suggests that the cell is sensitive to the severity of inositol and phosphate limitation. A wild-type strain growing in I-, low-Pi medium is still capable of making its own inositol and transporting Pi into the cell. An ino1
pho86
mutant growing in I-, low-Pi medium, on the other hand, has no source of inositol (but grows for a limited time on its internal reserves), has a greatly diminished ability to transport Pi, and shows hyperactivated GIT1 transcription and GroPIns incorporation.
Using genome-wide expression analysis, others have reported that the GIT1 transcript accumulates when phosphate limitation is artificially imposed by deletion of PHO85 or chemical inhibition of Pho85p (5). In another microarray study, GIT1 did not meet the authors' criteria for being a phosphate-regulated gene but did display the induction of transcription in low-Pi versus high-Pi media in one of two wild-type strains tested (15). Those studies were performed with I+ media. In wild-type strain JPV91, GIT1 transcription is significantly affected only by phosphate concentrations in I- media. Thus, the relative contributions of inositol depletion and phosphate depletion in affecting GIT1 transcription appear to be strain dependent. Wykoff and O'Shea (28) reported that the overexpression of GIT1 in high-Pi medium suppresses the nonviability of a strain from which all other known phosphate transporter genes (PHO84, PHO87, PHO89, PHO90, and PHO91) have been deleted. The authors concluded that Git1p is capable of transporting Pi, albeit with a higher Km for Pi than that exhibited by Pho84p. Although differences in strain backgrounds and assay conditions preclude a direct comparison, it is worth noting that the reported apparent Km for Pi transport by Git1p (28) is approximately 10-fold higher than the reported apparent Km for GroPIns transport by Git1p (19).
An initial experiment (Fig. 5) aimed at determining the regulatory systems responsible for controlling GIT1 expression indicates that PHO4 is required for GIT1 transcription under high-phosphate conditions. Future studies will include a thorough analysis of all potential transcription factors (e.g., Ino4p, Ino2p, Pho4p, and Pho2p) and promoter elements involved in controlling GIT1 expression in response to inositol and phosphate. Pho4p, the PHO regulon transcription factor, is a bHLH binding protein whose consensus sequence is CACGTK (17). Five potential Pho4p binding sites and three potential Pho2p binding sites (TAATRA/TAANTAA) exist in the GIT1 promoter region between nucleotides -1 and -700 relative to the ATG start codon. The GIT1 promoter does not contain a copy of the core consensus sequence (CATGTG) for UASINO. However, it does contain a bHLH consensus sequence (CACGTG) to which Ino2p and Ino4p (bHLH proteins) bind, although with less affinity than to UASINO, to activate INO1 transcription (3). Given that mammalian bHLH binding proteins have been shown to form multiple dimer combinations that can act upon diverse sets of genes (23), it is tempting to speculate that Pho4p may heterodimerize with Ino2p or Ino4p to regulate GIT1 transcription in response to inositol and phosphate. In support of this possibility, Ino4p has been shown by a yeast two-hybrid assay and a biochemical assay to interact with Pho4p, as well as other bHLH binding proteins (22). Interestingly, PHO5 expression is partially repressed by inositol availability and the deletion of PHO2 (18). In addition to promoter analysis, future studies will include an analysis of GIT1 mRNA turnover and Git1p turnover as functions of inositol and phosphate availabilities.
We thank S. A. Henry for critical reading of the manuscript.
Present address: Department of Surgery, SUNYDownstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY 11203. ![]()
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