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Molecular and Cellular Biology, September 2007, p. 6446-6456, Vol. 27, No. 18
0270-7306/07/$08.00+0     doi:10.1128/MCB.02205-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Hog1 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Phosphorylation Targets the Yeast Fps1 Aquaglyceroporin for Endocytosis, Thereby Rendering Cells Resistant to Acetic Acid{triangledown}

Mehdi Mollapour and Peter W. Piper*

Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, University of Sheffield, Firth Court, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, England

Received 24 November 2006/ Returned for modification 22 January 2007/ Accepted 25 June 2007

Aquaporins and aquaglyceroporins form the membrane channels that mediate fluxes of water and small solute molecules into and out of cells. Eukaryotes often use mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades for the intracellular signaling of stress. This study reveals an aquaglyceroporin being destabilized by direct MAPK phosphorylation and also a stress resistance being acquired through this channel loss. Hog1 MAPK is transiently activated in yeast exposed to high, toxic levels of acetic acid. This Hog1 then phosphorylates the plasma membrane aquaglyceroporin, Fps1, a phosphorylation that results in Fps1 becoming ubiquitinated and endocytosed and then degraded in the vacuole. As Fps1 is the membrane channel that facilitates passive diffusional flux of undissociated acetic acid into the cell, this loss downregulates such influx in low-pH cultures, where acetic acid (pKa, 4.75) is substantially undissociated. Consistent with this downregulation of the acid entry generating resistance, sensitivity to acetic acid is seen with diverse mutational defects that abolish endocytic removal of Fps1 from the plasma membrane (loss of Hog1, loss of the soluble domains of Fps1, a T231A S537A double mutation of Fps1 that prevents its in vivo phosphorylation, or mutations generating a general loss of endocytosis of cell surface proteins [doa4{Delta} and end3{Delta}]). Remarkably, targetting of Fps1 for degradation may be the major requirement for an active Hog1 in acetic acid resistance, since Hog1 is largely dispensable for such resistance when the cells lack Fps1. Evidence is presented that in unstressed cells, Hog1 exists in physical association with the N-terminal cytosolic domain of Fps1.


* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, University of Sheffield, Firth Court, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, United Kingdom. Phone: 44-114-222-2851. Fax: 44-114-222-2800. E-mail: peter.piper{at}sheffield.ac.uk

{triangledown} Published ahead of print on 9 July 2007.


Molecular and Cellular Biology, September 2007, p. 6446-6456, Vol. 27, No. 18
0270-7306/07/$08.00+0     doi:10.1128/MCB.02205-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.




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