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CAT8 & YMR279C: My Favorite Yeast Genes

    If dogs hadn't gotten it first, Saccharomyces cervisiae would probably have been bequeathed the title of "Man's Best Friend." Although they don't fetch or bark or radiate a sense of everlasting companionship, the unicellular fungi can be counted on to metabolize sugar by fermentation. Scientists discovered that this process generates free ethanol and carbon dioxide around dawn of agricultural civilization, and humankind has been domesticating yeasts like S. cervisiae for the production of bread and beer ever since.1

    Science has changed a lot over the last 3,500 years. Beer and bread have become staples of our diet, more often found in refrigerators than on the cutting edge, and yeast itself has become something of a staple for our science. S. cervisiae is one of the best-characterized organisms for studying genetics, and in 1996 became the first eukaryote to have its complete genome sequenced.2

Fig 1. Graphical View of Protein Coding Genes (as of Oct 08, 2005). From the Saccharomyces Genome Database (SGD)
A pie chart depicting the verification status of all ORFs

    But sequence is only the first step to understanding. The S. cervisiae genome consists of 12,156,590 base-pairs divided amongst 16 chromosomes, encoding a predicted 6,591 ORFs.3 While functional information has been determined for a majority of these, roughly one-third of the ORFs remain totally unannotated. To explore what the differences in data are between annotated and unannotated genes, I present as much information as I could find, excluding microarray & protein interaction data sources or resorting to actual experimentation, on two genes that are located directly next to each other on chromosome 13.

 

 

 

Overview

recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter recenter Protein-coding Gene: YMR275C chrXIII:815650..818580 Protein-coding Gene: YMR276W chrXIII:818826..819947 Protein-coding Gene: YMR277W chrXIII:820255..822453 Protein-coding Gene: YMR278W chrXIII:822762..824630 Protein-coding Gene: YMR279C chrXIII:824728..826350 Protein-coding Gene: YMR280C chrXIII:827027..831328 Protein-coding Gene: YMR281W chrXIII:832338..833252 Protein-coding Gene: YMR282C chrXIII:833355..835097 Protein-coding Gene: YMR283C chrXIII:835325..836866 Protein-coding Gene: YMR284W chrXIII:838186..839994 Protein-coding Gene: YMR285C chrXIII:840143..841690
Fig 2. The protein-encoding genes on S. cerevisiae's 13th chromosome from 817,027bp to 841,328bp. An alternate view can be accessed here.
Courtesy of the Saccharomyces Genome Database (SGD) 2005.



chrXIII:817,027-841,328
Table 1. A table of gene ontology, protein statistics, and sequence data. All data courtesy SGD
Gene
CAT8 (YMR280C)
Molecular Function
-"Specific RNA polymerase II transcription factor activity" Molecular Function unknown
Biological Process

-"Positive regulation of gluconeogenesis"
-"Positve regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II promoter"

Biological Process unknown
Cellular Component
-"Nucleus" Cellular Component unknown
Protein Information
Protein Sequence Calculations
from Predicted Full length Translation
N-term MANNNSD
C-term FQWQNAK
Length(aa) 1,433
MW(Da) 160,484
pI 9.73
Transcript Translation Calculations
Codon Bias 0.031  
Codon Adaptation Index 0.132  
Frequency of Optimal Codons 0.419  
Hydropathicity of Protein -0.568  
Aromaticity Score 0.069  
Protein Sequence Calculations
from Predicted Full length Translation
N-term MFSIFKK
C-term EDRSLEA
Length(aa) 540
MW(Da) 59,561
pI 8.22
Transcript Translation Calculations
Codon Bias 0.087  
Codon Adaptation Index 0.115  
Frequency of Optimal Codons 0.454  
Hydropathicity of Protein 0.539  
Aromaticity Score 0.137  
Mutant Phenotype "Null mutant is viable but unable to grow on non-fermentable carbon sources due to failure to derepress all major gluconeogenic enzymes; overexpression of Cat8p suppress inability of snf1 and snf4 mutants to grow on ethanol." "viable"
Sequence Information
Click here for sequence data

 

CAT8

Fig 4. A diagram of the gluconeogenesis/glycolysis pathway in yeast, with genes that Cat8p regulates in boxes. Taken from Haurie et al.5 Permission pending from The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, inc.
Click for a larger version.

    Yeast prefers to metabolize glucose by fermentation, but if environmental sugars run out, it can transform to a nonfermentative metabolism and use the ethanol (or other C2 or C3 energy substrate) it may have previously produced as an energy source.4 This change is called the diauxic shift, and as one might expect for a process that drastically alters metabolic input, changes the expression of a wide variety of genes. CAT8 encodes a transcriptional activator zinc-cluster protein designated Cat8p which derepresses at least 34 other genes that are highly induced during the initial stages of the diauxic shift.5 Almost all 34 of these genes have the CSRE (carbon source-responsive element) motif somewhere in their promoter region, which is the suspected site by which Cat8p regulates their expression.5

    To guage how CAT8 is conserved among different species, a PSI-BLAST search was conducted with the gene's amino acid sequence against the UniRef database. Figure 5 and table 2 summarize the results, and indicate that CAT8 is conserved only in fungi.

 

 

 

 

Table 2. A table of the top 4 hits from a PSI-BLAST query for CAT8, taken from SGD
Acession number Organism Description E-value % aligned
Q6FJW6 Candida glabrata Candida glabrata strain CBS138 chromosome M complete sequence 1.0e-261 99.8
P39113 Saccharomyces cerevisiae Regulatory protein CAT8 1.0e-261 100
O74229 Kluyveromyces lactis Cat8p 1.0e-174 98.7
Q75DZ4 Eremothecium gossypii ABL121Cp 1.0e-160 99.9

 

Fig 5. A taxonomy diagram indicating the conservation of CAT8, or CAT8-like, proteins among different species, derived from a PSI-BLAST query of UNIREF with CAT8 (SGD).

    Unfortunately, there are no solutions to CAT8 in the protein database, and the closest homolog (ID66) only has 51 amino acids in common(4.1%) with an e-value of 1.7e-05. An NCBI6 search for conserved domains (fig 6.) only produced three hits, two of which were found in GAL4-like transcription regulators that had a zinc-finger, and one of which was simply called "Fungal specific transcription factor." A Kyte-Doolittle hydropathy plot (fig. 7) revealed several regions with hydropathicity scores greater than 1.8, but none were of realistic extent for a true transmembrane protein. Besides, CAT8 has been well characterized as a transcriptional controller, so perhaps the peaks have to do with certain regions that interact with DNA.

 

Fig 6. A diagram of conserved domains in CAT8 from NCBI6. The red ovals represent the GAL domain, and the blue, the fungal specific transcription factor. You can perform the search yourself here.

 

Fig 7. A Kyte-Doolittle hydropathy plot for CAT8p.

 

Fig 8. PREDATOR secondary structure prediction results. The statistics indicate a quarter of the structure is alpha-helicies, and the majority is "Random Coil" a.k.a. unknown. This is still consistent with the hypothesis that CAT8 is a transcription regulator.
PREDATOR :                                 
Alpha helix     (Hh) :   364 is  25.40%
310  helix       (Gg) :     0 is   0.00%
Pi helix        (Ii) :     0 is   0.00%
Beta bridge     (Bb) :     0 is   0.00%
Extended strand (Ee) :   115 is   8.03%
Beta turn       (Tt) :     0 is   0.00%
Bend region     (Ss) :     0 is   0.00%
Random coil     (Cc) :   954 is  66.57%
Ambigous states (?)  :     0 is   0.00%
Other states         :     0 is   0.00%

 

YMR279C

    As indicated in the overview section, there currently is no accepted gene ontology information for YMR279C. What can we find out using the awesome array of public databases online? Let's start with a PSI-BLAST query (Fig. 9 & Table 3). Interestingly, YMR279C seems to be much more conserved than CAT8. Perhaps this is because CAT8 is nearly 3 times as large as YMR279C and hence, from a purely statistical perspective, less likely to retain its integrity over time. On the other hand, CAT8 may just be a very specific regulatory gene for yeast, and YMR279C of more general function. The BLAST results indicate YMR279C may be potentially have a role as a transporter of some kind, possibly a drug resistance transporter, in which case it would probably have a number of transmembrane domains. Let's investigate the domains conserved in our potential transporter, and then judge its potential to be embedded in a phosopholipid bilayer by calculating a Kyte-Doolittle plot.

Fig 9. A taxonomy diagram indicating the conservation of YMR279C or YMR279C-like, proteins among different species, generated by a PSI-BLAST query of UNIREF(SGD).

 

Fig 10. A diagram of conserved domains in YMR279C from NCBI6. The black line on top represents YMR0279C, and the colored ovals conserved domains. You can perform the search yourself here.

1. pfam06609, TRI12, Fungal trichothecene efflux pump (TRI12). Only 36.0% aligned, e-value=0.001

2. pfam00083, Sugar_tr, Sugar (and other) transporter.. Only 18.8% aligned, e-value=0.008.

 

Fig 11. A Kyte-Doolittle hydropathy plot for YMR279C.

    The conserved domain search (fig. 10) presents interesting results, correlating YMR0279C with two other transport proteins, one apparently involved in pumping toxins. However, neither have enough sequence in common with YMR0279C to generate significant e-values. The Kyte-Doolittle hydropathy plot (fig. 11) indicates the protein is predicted to have a substantial number (at least 7) of transmembrane domains, which supports the hypothesis that YMR0279 is a transmembrane protein.

Fig 8. PREDATOR secondary structure prediction results. The statistics indicate a quarter of the structure is alpha-helicies, and almost half is "random coil" The rest are just lengths of extended strand. It is interesting that the proportions of Alpha helicies and random coils is so similar to those in CAT8.
PREDATOR :                               
Alpha helix     (Hh) :   138 is  25.56%
310  helix       (Gg) :     0 is   0.00%
Pi helix        (Ii) :     0 is   0.00%
Beta bridge     (Bb) :     0 is   0.00%
Extended strand (Ee) :   145 is  26.85%
Beta turn       (Tt) :     0 is   0.00%
Bend region     (Ss) :     0 is   0.00%
Random coil     (Cc) :   257 is  47.59%
Ambigous states (?)  :     0 is   0.00%
Other states         :     0 is   0.00

 

Conclusion

    Almost no direct data is available for the non-verified yeast protein YMR279C, and nothing can be certain where expirimental evidence is lacking. Nonetheless, by searching for other, known genes that encode similar amino acid sequences, it was possible to generate some preliminary data. It appears as if YMR279C is a transmembrane protein, possibly involved in the transport of a moderately complex molecule. The evidence for this comes from its conserved domains, which were also present in a protein that was involved in transporting sugar, and another that was involved in transporting a toxin.

    CAT8, on the other hand, has been rather well studied, and besides its actual structure, of which there is no definitive information, its function is understood rather well. While not the direct initiator of the diauxic shift, CAT8 becomes active rather early as an essential translation regulator and is responsible for derepressing at least 34 genes as it participates in the expression cascade that ultimately reverses yeast's metabolism.

References

1Wikipedia. 2005 3 Oct. Fermentation#History.<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermentation#History>. Accessed 2005 8 Oct.

2NCBI. 2003. National Center for Biotechnology Information. <http://www.ncbi.nih.gov/>. Accessed 2005 8 Oct.

3Saccharomyces Genome Database. 2005. <http://www.yeastgenome.org/cache/genomeSnapshot.html>. Accessed 2005 8 Oct.

4Randez-Gil, F., Bojunga, N., Proft, M., & Entian, K-D. 1997. Glucose Derepression of Gluconeogenic Enzymes in Saccharomyces       cerevisiae Correlates with Phosphorylation of the Gene Activator Cat8p. Molecular and Cellular Biology 17(5):2502-2510.       Freetext .pdf available at http://mcb.asm.org/cgi/reprint/17/5/2502?view=reprint&pmid=9111319. PMID:9111319.       Accessed 10/8/2005.

5Haurie, V. et al. 2001.The Transcriptional Activator Cat8p Provides a Major Contribution to the Reprogramming of Carbon       Metabolism during the Diauxic Shift in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The Journal of Biological Chemistry 276(1):76-85. Freetext       .pdf available at http://www.jbc.org/cgi/content/full/276/1/76. PMID:11024040. Accessed 10/8/2005.

6Marchler-Bauer A, Bryant SH (2004), "CD-Search: protein domain annotations on the fly.", Nucleic Acids Res. 32:W327-331.

Kyte-Doolite Hydropathy Plot. 2003.       <http://occawlonline.pearsoned.com/bookbind/pubbooks/bc_mcampbell_genomics_1/medialib/activities/kd/kyte-doolittle.htm>.        Accessed 2005 8 Oct.

[PREDATOR] <http://npsa-pbil.ibcp.fr/cgi-bin/npsa_automat.pl?page=/NPSA/npsa_preda.html>. Accessed 2005 8 Oct.

 


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