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Eukaryotic Cell, April 2007, p. 592-599, Vol. 6, No. 4
1535-9778/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/EC.00382-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Mg2+ Deprivation Elicits Rapid Ca2+ Uptake and Activates Ca2+/Calcineurin Signaling in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Gerlinde Wiesenberger,1
Katarina Steinleitner,1
Roland Malli,2
Wolfgang F. Graier,2
Jürgen Vormann,3
Rudolf J. Schweyen,1 and
Jochen A. Stadler1*
Max F. Perutz Laboratories, Department of Genetics, University of Vienna, Dr. Bohr-Gasse 9, A-1030 Vienna, Austria,1
Institute of Medical Biochemistry & Medical Molecular Biology, Medical University of Graz, Harrachgasse 21/III, A-8010 Graz, Austria,2
Institute for Prevention and Nutrition, Adalperostraße 37, D-85737, Ismaning, Germany3
Received 5 December 2006/
Accepted 15 February 2007

ABSTRACT
To learn about the cellular processes involved in Mg
2+ homeostasis
and the mechanisms allowing cells to cope with low Mg
2+ availability,
we performed RNA expression-profiling experiments and followed
changes in gene activity upon Mg
2+ depletion on a genome-wide
scale. A striking portion of genes up-regulated under Mg
2+ depletion
are also induced by high Ca
2+ and/or alkalinization. Among the
genes significantly up-regulated by Mg
2+ starvation, Ca
2+ stress,
and alkalinization are
ENA1 (encoding a P-type ATPase sodium
pump) and
PHO89 (encoding a sodium/phosphate cotransporter).
We show that up-regulation of these genes is dependent on the
calcineurin/Crz1p (calcineurin-responsive zinc finger protein)
signaling pathway. Similarly to Ca
2+ stress, Mg
2+ starvation
induces translocation of the transcription factor Crz1p from
the cytoplasm into the nucleus. The up-regulation of
ENA1 and
PHO89 upon Mg
2+ starvation depends on extracellular Ca
2+. Using
fluorescence resonance energy transfer microscopy, we demonstrate
that removal of Mg
2+ results in an immediate increase in free
cytoplasmic Ca
2+. This effect is dependent on external Ca
2+.
The results presented indicate that Mg
2+ depletion in yeast
cells leads to enhanced cellular Ca
2+ concentrations, which
activate the Crz1p/calcineurin pathway. We provide evidence
that calcineurin/Crz1p signaling is crucial for yeast cells
to cope with Mg
2+ depletion stress.

INTRODUCTION
Mg
2+ is the most abundant divalent cation in cells, where the
ion predominantly serves as a counterion for solutes, particularly
ATP and other nucleotides, RNA and DNA. By binding to RNAs and
many proteins, Mg
2+ also contributes to establishing and maintaining
physiological structures and acts as an important cofactor in
catalytic processes. Mg
2+ also stabilizes membranes and active
conformations of macromolecules (reviewed in references
18,
37, and
38). Cellular Mg
2+ concentrations are in the millimolar
range (

15 to 20 mM), some 3 orders of magnitude higher than
those of Ca
2+ (100 to 200 nM) (
4,
5,
17,
20,
38). The vast majority
of Mg
2+ is bound to ligands, leaving a small fraction of up
to 5% in a free ionized state (
38,
40). Cellular Mg
2+ homeostasis
involves systems facilitating influx and others that mediate
extrusion of the ion. Mg
2+ influx is an electrogenic process
driven by the inside negative membrane potential and mediated
by channels in the plasma membrane, either by TRPM6 and TRPM7
proteins in mammals (
42,
43) or by members of the heterogeneous
CorA/Mrs2/Alr1 protein family in prokaryotes, organelles, lower
eukaryotes, and plants (
15,
17,
23,
24,
53,
54). These high-affinity
Mg
2+ uptake systems allow cells to grow even in the presence
of very low external Mg
2+ concentrations. In mutants lacking
these systems, cells survive only when provided with high external
Mg
2+ concentrations. Extrusion of Mg
2+ occurs against the electrochemical
gradient and is mediated by exchange against Na
+, H
+, or other
ions, making use of their inside-directed gradients to drive
the process (
10,
40).
Although Ca2+ concentrations are several orders of magnitude lower than those of Mg2+, the two ions appear to affect each other in a mostly antiparallel fashion. In yeast, vacuolar Ca2+ accumulation is blocked by increased Mg2+ in the medium, and alr1
mutants having lower Mg2+ exhibit elevated Ca2+ (5, 17). In pancreatic acinar cells, an increase in intracellular Mg2+ results in a decrease of Ca2+ influx, whereas intracellular Ca2+ mobilization is associated with a reduction in Mg2+ (31). Moreover, extracellular Mg2+ is known to regulate K+ and Ca2+ channels in the plasma membrane (6, 29, 44). Intracellular Mg2+ concentrations in mammalian cells have been reported to change in response to hormonal stimuli, albeit much more slowly than do Ca2+ concentrations (10, 31, 40). In some cases, these mutual modulations may simply reflect a replacement of one divalent cation by the other, but Mg2+ effects on Ca2+ signaling have frequently been observed (31).
Mg2+ starvation of rats has been reported to elicit significant up-regulation of expression of genes involved in oxygen stress in thymocytes (35). These effects result from long-lasting Mg2+ starvation conditions (2 days) and may include immediate responses of cells to Mg2+ withdrawal as well as secondary effects reflecting induction of stress phenomena.
In an attempt to understand the direct effects of Mg2+ starvation, we followed a whole-genome approach in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We set out to analyze short-term responses to Mg2+ withdrawal in yeast cells by transcriptomal analysis. A relatively confined set (<2%) of the total of 6,300 genes responded with a significant, at least twofold, increase in transcript levels. Most of them were found to be similarly up-regulated by other treatments that elicited a Ca2+ peak. In fact, we observed an increase of cytoplasmic Ca2+ immediately after cells were transferred to low-Mg2+ medium, and up-regulation of the calcineurin/Crz1p (calcineurin-responsive zinc finger protein) signaling pathway.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Yeast strains, plasmids, and media.
S. cerevisiae strains used in this study are Y00000 (BY4741),
Y05353 (BY4741;
crz1::
kanMX4) and Y05040 (BY4741;
cnb1::
kanMX4)
from the EUROSCARF collection (
http://web.uni-frankfurt.de/fb15/mikro/euroscarf/).
The presence of the deletions was confirmed by qualitative PCR
using two specific primer pairs for wild-type and deletion mutant
strains (data not shown). Wild-type strain JS034-4C is described
by Stadler and Schweyen (
47). The Crz1-green fluorescent protein
(GFP) fusion construct (pRSP97) is described by Polizotto and
Cyert (
36). Synthetic medium was prepared according to Sherman
(
46): for standard medium, 1 mM MgCl
2 was added, and for Mg
2+ free medium, the MgCl
2 was omitted. EGTA (10 mM, pH 8.0) was
added where indicated. Medium containing high Ca
2+ was buffered
with 50 mM MES (morpholineethanesulfonic acid [pH 6.0]).
Mg2+ starvation and RNA isolation.
For each experiment, two identical yeast cultures were grown in synthetic medium containing 1 mM MgCl2 to an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of 0.5. The cultures were centrifuged, washed twice with prewarmed synthetic medium containing either 1 mM MgCl2 (+Mg2+) or no MgCl2 (Mg2+), and resuspended in the same medium. For time course experiments, aliquots were removed at the indicated time points; for all other experiments, cells were harvested 70 min after the first wash. For the FK506 experiment, FK506 (Fujisawa GmbH, Munich) in dimethyl sulfoxide was added to a final concentration of 1 µg/ml (1.25 µM) 10 min before centrifugation and for all subsequent steps. Total RNA was isolated using the hot acidic phenol method (1). For microarray experiments, three chloroform extractions were performed instead of one.
DNA microarray analyses.
Yeast cDNA arrays were obtained from the Ontario Cancer Institute Microarray Centre. Reverse transcription, probe cleanup, and microarray hybridization were performed according to the manufacturer's protocol. Two individual experiments including dye swap were performed. Microarrays were read using an axon GenePix 4000B laser scanner (Axon Instruments) and analyzed with the GenePix Pro 3.0 software. The Saccharomyces Genome Database (http://www.yeastgenome.org/) was used to extract the information on the genes regulated by Mg2+ starvation. The geneXplorer 2.0: Megayeast site from Stanford University (http://genome-www.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/yeast_stress/gx?n = megayeast&rx = 5&ry) was used to search for genes induced under general stress conditions.
Northern blot experiments.
Twenty-five-microgram samples of total RNA were subjected to gel electrophoresis and blotted to nitrocellulose membranes (27). 32P-labeled probes for hybridization were generated by either random primed labeling (Roche) from PCR-synthesized DNAs or hot PCR on genomic DNA using the following oligonucleotide primers: ENA1F (5'-TTATCGCGGTCAATGTGCTC), ENA1R (5'-ATCAAACTCACGTTGCCCTC), PHO89F (5'-TGCTTTACTGCTGGTTGGTG), and PHO89R (5'-AGCGTTGGCAACGTCATTAG). For quantification of RNA levels, the blots were rehybridized to an actin probe generated using the primers ACT1F (5'-ACCAAGAGAGGTATCTTGACTTTACG) and ACT1R (5'-GACATCGACATCACACTTCATGATGG). Documentation and analyses of the Northern blots were performed using the Amersham Biosciences Typhoon 8600 phosphorimaging system and the Molecular Dynamics Image Quant software.
Fluorescence microscopy.
For determination of the subcellular location of Crz1p, plasmid pRSP97 (a GFP-CRZ1 fusion construct) (36) was transformed into BY4741. The transformants were grown in synthetic complete medium lacking uracil (SC Ura [containing 1 mM MgCl2 and 10 mg/liter methionine]) to an OD600 of 1 to 1.5. One-milliliter aliquots were spun in a tabletop centrifuge (30 s at 7,000 rpm), washed twice in SC Ura medium (prewarmed to 30°C, with 1 mM Mg2+, 0 mM Mg2+, or 200 mM CaCl2, respectively), resuspended in the same medium, and incubated for 10 min at 30°C. Prior to microscopy, the cells were briefly spun in a Qualtron microcentrifuge and resuspended in a small volume of the supernatant.
Determination of cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentrations.
To express YC2-12 in yeast, a 2.5-kb BamHI-XhoI fragment from YC2.12 in pCS2 (30) was cloned into the yeast expression plasmid pVT-U (51). The resulting plasmid (pGW845) was transformed into BY4741. Transformants were grown in selective medium containing 1 mM Mg2+ to an OD600 of 0.5 to 1.5 and concentrated to 1/100 volume in a Qualtron microcentrifuge. Cytosolic Ca2+ concentration was measured as previously described (14, 26). Briefly, yeast cells stably expressing the sensor in the cytosol were immobilized on glass coverslips with concanavalin A (Sigma-Aldrich) and placed into an experimental chamber that allowed continuous perfusion and fast buffer switch. The microscope consists of a Nikon inverted microscope (Eclipse 300TE, Nikon, Vienna, Austria) equipped with CFI Plan Fluor x40 oil immersion objective (NA 1.3; Nikon, Vienna, Austria), an epifluorescence system (150 W XBO; Optiquip, Highland Mills, NY), and a liquid-cooled charge-coupled device camera (30°C; Quantix KAF 1400G2, Roper Scientific, Acton, MA). All devices were controlled by Metafluor 4.0 (Visitron Systems, Puchheim, Germany). To monitor the cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration, the cells were illuminated at 440 nm (Cameleon; 440AF21; Omega Optical, Brattleboro, VT). An optical beam splitter (Dual-View Micro-Imager; Optical Insights, Visitron Systems) was used in order to allow simultaneous emission rationing at 480 nm (480AF30; Omega Optical) and 535 nm (535AF26 with dichroic 455DRVP; Omega Optical).
Microarray data accession number.
Microarray data from this study are available at the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO; http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo) under accession no. GSE6687
[NCBI GEO]
.

RESULTS
Genome-wide analysis of gene expression in response to Mg2+ starvation.
To determine how cells cope with deprivation of the essential
metal ion Mg
2+ and to learn about the cellular processes involved
in Mg
2+ transport, we performed whole-genome microarray experiments.
Cells were grown in synthetic medium containing standard concentrations
of Mg
2+ (1 mM MgCl
2) and then shifted to nominally Mg
2+-free
medium or to fresh medium containing standard concentrations
of Mg
2+. The expression profile of cells shifted to Mg
2+-free
medium was compared to that of cells grown in 1 mM Mg
2+. Ninety
minutes after the shift from 1 mM to nominally Mg
2+-free medium,
we found genes belonging to particular functional clusters to
be up-regulated (Table
1). Among the genes most significantly
induced were several genes encoding proteins involved in Na
+,
phosphate, and energy homeostasis: i.e., Na
+ pump P-type ATPase
genes and their stabilizing factors (
ENA1,
ENA2,
ENA5, and
STF2 and its homologue,
YLR327c) and
PHO89, required for sodium-dependent
phosphate uptake. In contrast, genes encoding acid phosphatases
(
PHO3,
PHO11, and
PHO12) were found to be down-regulated. Other
genes found to be up-regulated upon Mg
2+ deprivation are involved
in cytoskeleton organization (
ABP1,
MTI1,
RVS167,
SAC6, and
SRV2) and membrane synthesis (
ARE2,
ERG26, and
PLB3). The proteins
encoded by these genes might stabilize the cytoskeleton and
membranes to compensate for the lack of Mg
2+, as Mg
2+ is known
to be crucial in stabilizing the cell shape and for membrane
integrity. Moreover, typical stress response genes were induced
as well as genes for carbohydrate and amino acid metabolism,
vacuolar protein degradation, and a large set of genes with
known or unknown function, which do not form obvious functional
clusters (see Table
1 for details).
A striking number of genes up-regulated upon Mg
2+ starvation
are also up-regulated under one ore more of the following conditions:
Ca
2+ stress, Na
+ stress (
57), or alkalization of the growth
medium (
45,
52) (see Table
1). In particular, of the 112 genes
significantly up-regulated (± standard deviation of

2)
42 (38%) are known to be up-regulated by Ca
2+ and 13 (12%) by
high Na
+, of which 11 are also induced by Ca
2+, giving a total
of 44 out of 112 genes (39%) up-regulated by temporal Mg
2+ deprivation
and also by short-term Ca
2+ and/or Na
+ stress. Furthermore,
many of the genes induced/repressed by Mg
2+ starvation seem
to respond to general stress conditions as they are similarly
regulated under various conditions of stress (
16) (Table
1).
ENA1 and PHO89 transcripts are rapidly induced upon Mg2+ starvation.
To confirm that induction of transcripts is due to depletion of Mg2+ and to investigate the kinetics of transcriptional induction by Mg2+ starvation, we performed Northern blot analyses of two genes highly induced in the microarray experiment, ENA1, which encodes a P-type ATPase (19), and PHO89, a gene required for phosphate uptake (28). For this experiment, two cultures were grown under identical conditions. One culture was washed and resuspended in medium lacking Mg2+ as described in Materials and Methods, and the other was mock treated with medium containing 1 mM Mg2+. As shown in Fig. 1, both ENA1 and PHO89 were indeed highly induced within 15 min of Mg2+ starvation (lanes 8 to 12), whereas only a very small transient increase of ENA1 and PHO89 transcript levels can be observed in cultures treated the same way with the regular growth medium (1 mM Mg2+). This small response in the control samples is probably due to the treatment of the cells (centrifugation and supply of fresh medium). While PHO89 mRNA steady-state levels remained high for at least 4 h after Mg2+ depletion, ENA1 induction appeared more temporal as the gene expression was again down-regulated after 2 h. Thus, at least for certain genes, this induction by Mg2+ depletion appears transient.
Induction of ENA1 and PHO89 transcription by low Mg2+ is mediated by the transcription factor Crz1p and requires calcineurin signaling.
Many of the genes induced by Mg
2+ starvation have previously
been shown to be under the control of the calcineurin-dependent
transcription factor Crz1p: i.e., the calcineurin/Crz1p-dependent
signaling pathway (
9,
57). Thus, we investigated whether transcriptional
induction upon Mg
2+ starvation is dependent on the transcription
factor Crz1p. For this purpose, Mg
2+ starvation and subsequent
Northern blot analysis were performed on wild-type and
crz1
strains. As seen in the Northern blot (Fig.
2A, lanes 1 and
2), both the
ENA1 and
PHO89 transcripts were increased by Mg
2+ starvation. No such induction was observed in the
crz1
cells
(lanes 3 and 4). Moreover, steady state levels of
ENA1 and
PHO89 were slightly lower in
crz1
cells grown in regular medium compared
to the isogenic wild type (compare lanes 1 and 3).
The activity of Crz1p is regulated by the Ca
2+/calmodulin-dependent
protein phosphatase calcineurin. Dephosphorylation of the transcription
factor Crz1p results in its translocation to the nucleus, where
it becomes active (
36,
49). To determine whether Mg
2+ starvation
also promotes nuclear localization of Crz1p, we followed the
localization of GFP-tagged Crz1p (
36) under standard and Mg
2+ starvation conditions, respectively. GFP-Crz1p is located in
the cytoplasm under normal growth conditions (Fig.
2B, a and d).
Yet, when the cells were shifted to Mg
2+-free medium, nuclear
accumulation of GFP-tagged Crz1p was observed within 10 min
(Fig.
2B, b and e). The same was true when cells were challenged
with 200 mM Ca
2+ (Fig.
2B, c and f), indicating that under both
circumstances Crz1p is targeted to the nucleus to induce its
target genes. However, it has to be noted that more GFP-Crz1p
stays in the cytoplasm upon Mg
2+ depletion than under Ca
2+ stress.
This observation is reminiscent of Crz1p nuclear translocation
upon Na
+ (800 mM) or mild Ca
2+ (

150 mM) stress, where only partial
translocation to the nucleus had been seen (
49). When cells
were mock treated (centrifuged and washed) with fresh medium
containing 1 mM MgCl
2, GFP-Crz1p stayed in the cytoplasm (data
not shown). Neither GFP alone, nor an Msn2-GFP fusion protein
was translocated to the nucleus upon Mg
2+ depletion (data not
shown). Msn2, a transcriptional activator related to Msn4p,
is activated under stress conditions, resulting in its translocation
from the cytoplasm to the nucleus, where it binds DNA at stress
response elements of responsive genes, inducing gene expression
(
http://www.yeastgenome.org).
To ascertain whether transcriptional induction of ENA1 and PHO89 is also dependent on calcineurin, the phosphatase responsible for dephosphorylation of Crz1p, we performed Mg2+ starvation experiments in the calcineurin mutant (cnb1
) and in wild-type cells in the presence of the calcineurin inhibitor FK506. As shown in Fig. 3, transcriptional activation of ENA1 and PHO89 was indeed dependent on calcineurin function: while the wild-type cells starved for Mg2+ showed normal induction of both transcripts (Fig. 3, lanes 1, 2, 5, and 6), cnb1
cells (Fig. 3, lanes 3 and 4) or cells pretreated with FK506 did not induce the two transcripts upon Mg2+ depletion (Fig. 3, lane 7). Treatment of the cells with only dimethyl sulfoxide (the solvent for FK506) did not abolish the transcriptional response to Mg2+ depletion (data not shown). Similarly, addition of FK506 to the control experiment (1 mM Mg2+) did not affect expression (data not shown). Taken together, our results show that removal of Mg2+ from the growth medium results in activation of the calcineurin/Crz1p signaling pathway.
Cells lacking calcineurin/Crz1p signaling are sensitive to low Mg2+.
We have shown that yeast cells react to Mg
2+ deprivation by
activating a number of genes via the calcineurin/Crz1p pathway.
To investigate whether this response is necessary for cells
to cope with low-Mg
2+ stress, we analyzed the growth on Mg
2+-depleted
medium of mutants defective for calcineurin signaling. As shown
in Fig.
4 (left panel), growth of cells lacking either Crz1p
or Cnb1p (calcineurin B), the regulatory subunit of calcineurin,
is indistinguishable from that of wild-type cells on synthetic
medium containing standard magnesium concentrations. In contrast,
when Mg
2+ is omitted from the medium
crz1
or
cnb1
mutants exhibit
clearly reduced growth compared to the wild type (Fig.
4, right
panel), indicating that the induction of the calcineurin pathway
is important for cells to cope with Mg
2+ depletion.
External Ca2+ is required for the induction of ENA1 and PHO89 in response to low Mg2+.
Next, we investigated the role of Ca
2+ in the calcineurin/Crz1p
dependent up-regulation of
ENA1 and
PHO89 upon Mg
2+ depletion.
While in animal cells, the endoplasmic reticulum is the major
site of intracellular Ca
2+ storage and release, this does not
seem to be the case for yeast (
50). The two major sources for
calcium in yeast are the vacuole and the medium (
12,
41). Therefore,
we asked whether the source of the calcium signal is outside
the cell. We compared the
ENA1 and
PHO89 induction from cells
grown in medium containing standard concentrations of Ca
2+ with
those grown in medium containing the Ca
2+ chelator EGTA (Fig.
5). When 10 mM EGTA was added to the medium before and after
the shift to Mg
2+-free medium, the induction was completely
abolished (Fig.
5, lanes 3 and 4), as compared to standard Ca
2+ conditions (Fig.
5, lanes 1 and 2). Thus, we conclude that external
calcium contributes to the transcriptional induction by Mg
2+ depletion and that external calcium can indeed become limiting
for the response, as the signal is completely abolished when
EGTA is added to the media.
Cytoplasmic Ca2+ levels increase upon Mg2+ depletion with dependence on external Ca2+.
Since removal of Mg
2+ from the medium resulted in activation
of the calcineurin/Crz1p pathway and was dependent on external
Ca
2+, we wanted to know if this was caused by an increase in
cytosolic Ca
2+ concentration upon Mg
2+ removal. A number of
external stimuli, such as Ca
2+ or Na
+ stress, alkalinization
of the growth medium, alpha factor, and hyper- and hypo-osmotic
stress have so far been shown to trigger a rise in cytoplasmic
Ca
2+ (
3,
11,
32,
52,
57). To determine cytoplasmic Ca
2+ concentrations,
we expressed the cytosol-targeted Ca
2+-sensing protein YC2-12
(
30) in yeast under the strong constitutive
ADH1 promoter. This
sensor is a member of the "cameleon family" of Ca
2+ indicators
and consists of tandem fusions of a cyan-emitting fluorescent
protein, calmodulin, the calmodulin-binding peptide M13, and
a yellow-emitting fluorescent protein. Upon binding of Ca
2+ to calmodulin, this protein binds to the M13 domain, resulting
in an increase in the fluorescence resonance energy transfer
between the flanking fluorophores. To show that the sensor is
working in yeast, we challenged cells with 200 mM external Ca
2+.
This treatment resulted in a cytoplasmic Ca
2+ peak (Fig.
6,
right panel). Next, we investigated cytosolic Ca
2+ upon Mg
2+ depletion. As shown in Fig.
6 (left panel), removal of extracellular
Mg
2+ resulted in a rapid increase of the cytosolic Ca
2+ concentration
in the presence of 2 mM external Ca
2+. This signal was reversible
and normalized upon readdition of Mg
2+ into the external solution.
In contrast, in the absence of extracellular Ca
2+ (i.e., Ca
2+-free
buffer containing 10 mM EGTA), no cytosolic Ca
2+ elevation was
obtained in response to Mg
2+ removal. These data indicate that
the cytoplasmic elevation of Ca
2+ in response to the removal
of external Mg
2+ essentially depends on the presence of extracellular
Ca
2+, strongly indicating that an influx of Ca
2+ is occurring
under these conditions. The cytoplasmic Ca
2+ elevation upon
removal of extracellular Mg
2+ closely matched the peak obtained
in response to 200 mM external Ca
2+.

DISCUSSION
Interactions of Ca2+ and Mg2+.
Cellular Ca
2+ and Mg
2+ levels appear linked in many circumstances,
such that high Mg
2+ results in low Ca
2+ and vice versa. Thus,
internal Mg
2+ or Ca
2+ concentrations can be reciprocally modulated
by altering medium concentrations of Mg
2+ or Ca
2+, by hormone
stimulation, or by mutations of ion transporters (
5,
17,
31).
There are Ca
2+-dependent Mg
2+ transporters, possibly antiporters,
present in hepatocytes (
13,
39), as well as a Ca
2+/Mg
2+ exchanger
in the apical rat liver plasma membrane (
7). Also, Mg
2+ acts
at an extracellular site on L-type Ca
2+ channels to regulate
Ca
2+ influx (
2); the same is found on T-type Ca
2+ channels (
44).
There is evidence that this modulatory effect of Mg
2+ involves
the EF-hand motif of the COOH-terminus of Ca
2+ channels (
6).
In the present study, we found that the transcriptomal response
of Mg
2+ depletion is very similar to the Ca
2+ stress response:
i.e., yeast cells respond to Mg
2+ withdrawal from growth medium
with an immediate upshift of intracellular Ca
2+ concentrations;
activation of the transcription factor Crz1p via calcineurin,
a Crz1p phosphatase; and the upregulation of a gene set known
to be under the control of the calcineurin/Crz1p pathway. Mg
2+ depletion thus elicits a response which is widely similar to
that of Ca
2+ stress, high Na
+, or alkalinization.
Induction of the calcineurin/Crz1p pathway by low-Mg2+ stress.
This study commenced with the observation that short-term Mg2+ depletion in the yeast S. cerevisiae induces a number of genes known to be calcineurin/Crz1p regulated (45, 52, 57). This induction is immediate and transient. Crz1p is the vital transcription factor for Ca2+ signaling in yeast. Crz1p contains a zinc finger motif for DNA binding and binds specifically to the calcineurin-dependent response element, a 24-bp DNA sequence both necessary and sufficient for Ca2+-induced, calcineurin-dependent gene expression (48). The conserved Ca2+/calmodulin-regulated protein phosphatase calcineurin dephosphorylates and thereby activates Crz1p (49). Calcineurin is inhibited by the immunosuppressive drugs FK506 and cyclosporine and is essential for the antigen-dependent activation of T lymphocytes in higher eukaryotes (8, 25, 34). When dephosphorylated by calcineurin, Crz1p translocates from the cytoplasm to the nucleus, where it binds its target DNA in order to activate downstream genes (49; reviewed in reference 9). Similarly, we found that Crz1p shifted to the nucleus also upon Mg2+ depletion, as in the case of Ca2+ or Na+ stress (57), and Crz1p target genes were upregulated. Since this effect was missing in the calcineurin mutant and was inhibited by the calcineurin inhibitor FK506, dephosphorylation of Crz1p by calcineurin is a prerequisite. Taken together, short-term Mg2+ depletion results in the induction of the calcineurin/Crz1p pathway and requires both calcineurin and Crz1p function. This response is necessary for yeast cells to function properly under conditions of Mg2+ depletion, as calcineurin/Crz1p pathway mutants displayed reduced growth in Mg2+-depleted medium. The parallel induction of Crz1p by Mg2+ shortage and Ca2+ stress is reminiscent of the regulation of the transcription factor Aft1p, which, upon iron shortage as well as Co2+ stress, moves to the nucleus and induces its target genes (47, 55). In both instances, shortage of the more abundant ions (iron/Mg2+) mimics the effects induced by imbalances in the respective ions at lower physiological concentrations (Co2+/Ca2+). Also in both cases, these distinct responses confer resistance to the stress induced by metal ion shortage, or overexposure, respectively.
Mg2+ depletion induces rapid Ca2+ influx.
Depletion of external Mg2+ concentrations has no obvious short-term effect on intracellular Mg2+ concentrations (4, 17). Accordingly, the signal for switching on the calcineurin/Crz1 pathway is likely to arise from effects of low Mg2+ at the cell surface and to be mediated through the cell membrane. K+ and Ca2+ channels have been reported to open when Mg2+ falls below threshold concentrations (2, 33, 44, 56), and an effect of Mg2+ withdrawal on the opening of Ca2+ channels and influx of Ca2+ thus appears to be likely. In fact, we have demonstrated here that external Ca2+ is essential for the induction of Crz1p target genes by Mg2+ depletion. Moreover, upon Mg2+ depletion external Ca2+ is rapidly internalized, leading to high cytoplasmic Ca2+ similar to that observed in the presence of high Ca2+ concentrations in the medium.
High intracellular Ca2+ may also be helpful for the release of internal Mg2+ stores, perhaps maintaining the availability of free Mg2+ upon medium Mg2+ depletion.
Ca2+/calcineurin signaling is conserved from yeast to mammals. Activation of Crz1p by calcineurin is reminiscent of the regulation of the mammalian NFAT1 to -4 transcription factor proteins by Ca2+/calcineurin-dependent signaling. Similar to the situation in yeast, a rise in intracellular Ca2+ activates calcineurin in mammals, which in turn dephosphorylates all four NFAT proteins, leading to their rapid nuclear import (8, 22). Depending upon which binding partners are involved Ca2+/calcineurin-NFAT-mediated signaling pathways regulate gene expression either positively or negatively. Binding partners can be AP-1 (composed of Fos and Jun proteins), MEF2, GATA proteins, and histone deacetylases (21). Especially with respect to diseases associated with altered serum Mg2+ levels (hypomagnesemia and hypermagnesemia), it will be interesting to learn whether changes in the serum Mg2+ availability also influence Ca2+ signaling in higher eukaryotes.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank M. Iliev for technical support and D. F. Steele, C.
Schüller, and G. Brunt for many helpful suggestions. We
are grateful to Fujisawa GmbH (Munich) for providing FK506.
This work was supported by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Max F. Perutz Laboratories, Department of Genetics, University of Vienna, Dr. Bohr-Gasse 9, A-1030 Vienna, Austria. Phone: 43-1-4277-54614. Fax: 43-1-4277-9548. E-mail:
jochen.stadler{at}univie.ac.at 
Published ahead of print on 2 March 2007. 

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Eukaryotic Cell, April 2007, p. 592-599, Vol. 6, No. 4
1535-9778/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/EC.00382-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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