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Molecular and Cellular Biology, January 2004, p. 338-351, Vol. 24, No. 1
0270-7306/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.24.1.338-351.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Thomas Beck, Dietmar E. Martin, and Michael N. Hall*
Division of Biochemistry, Biozentrum, University of Basel, CH-4056 Basel, Switzerland
Received 19 May 2003/ Returned for modification 18 July 2003/ Accepted 1 October 2003
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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The yeast TORs control several readouts via a phosphatase switch composed of the type 2A-related phosphatase SIT4, the PP2A/SIT4-associated protein TAP42, and the TAP42-interacting protein TIP41 (16, 29, 31). Under good nutrient conditions, TOR promotes the binding of SIT4 to TAP42, thereby maintaining SIT4 inactive. On rapamycin treatment or nutrient depletion (i.e., TOR-inactivating conditions), SIT4 dissociates from its inhibitor TAP42 and is active. Activated SIT4 dephosphorylates and activates several targets, such as the GATA-type transcription factor GLN3, the Ser/Thr kinase NPR1, and TIP41 (2, 29, 54).
Under favorable nutrient conditions, TOR globally represses starvation-specific transcription by sequestering several nutrient-responsive transcription factors, such as the GATA factors GLN3 and GAT1, the zinc finger transcription factors MSN2 and MSN4, and the bHLH/Zip factor RTG1/3, in the cytoplasm (12, 35). In the case of GLN3, TOR prevents the transcription of genes normally induced on nitrogen limitation by promoting the association of GLN3 with the cytoplasmic URE2 protein (2, 4, 9, 25). The phosphorylation of GLN3, which is antagonized by SIT4, is critical for its interaction with URE2 and thus for its cytoplasmic retention (2). Similarly, TOR and TAP42 maintain the protein kinase NPR1 in an inactive, phosphorylated state whereas TOR inactivation results in the SIT4-dependent dephosphorylation and activation of NPR1. The phosphorylation state of NPR1, in turn, impinges on the sorting and turnover of amino acid permeases such as the tryptophan permease TAT2 and possibly the general amino acid permease GAP1 (3, 15, 54). Ultimately, both GLN3 and NPR1 are involved in scavenging or synthesizing alternative nutrient (nitrogen) sources. TOR also signals to the translation machinery via TAP42, but the mechanism by which TAP42 and/or the PP2A phosphatases are involved in the control of protein synthesis is unknown. TOR also negatively regulates RTG1/3, MSN2, and MSN4 but does so independently of SIT4 (2, 37). For other TOR readouts such as ribosome biogenesis or autophagy, the effector pathways are unknown but may involve novel TOR effectors or cross talk with other growth-controlling signaling pathways.
In addition to its redundant function with TOR1 in a rapamycin-sensitive signaling pathway, TOR2 performs a rapamycin-insensitive function that mediates the polarization of the actin cytoskeleton (53). Recently, two large TOR complexes comprising the TOR proteins and several partner proteins (KOG1, LST8, and AVO1 to AVO3) have been identified in yeast (38, 64). At least one of the complexes is conserved in mammals (24, 33, 38). These structurally and functionally distinct complexes account for the diversity and specificity of TOR signaling in yeast.
The RAS/cyclic AMP (cAMP) pathway in S. cerevisiae plays a major role in the control of growth and metabolism in response to nutrients. The core of the pathway consists of the guanine nucleotide exchange factor CDC25, which, presumably in response to nutrients, activates the redundant small GTPases RAS1 and RAS2 (RAS). RAS, in turn, activates adenylate cyclase (encoded by the CDC35 gene), resulting in the production of cAMP and activation of protein kinase A (PKA) by dissociation of the PKA regulatory subunit BCY1 and the PKA catalytic subunit(s) (redundantly encoded by the TPK1, TPK2, and TPK3 genes) (7). The RAS/cAMP pathway negatively regulates cellular physiology characteristic of stationary-phase/nutrient starvation. Thus, cells deficient in RAS/cAMP signaling, similarly to TOR-depleted or rapamycin-treated cells, exhibit a G1 cell cycle arrest, accumulation of storage carbohydrates (e.g., glycogen and trehalose), and specific changes in transcription (7, 59). RAS/cAMP signaling has also been implicated in the nutrient-mediated control of ribosome biogenesis (reviewed in reference 62; see Discussion). Consistently, cells with constitutive RAS/cAMP signaling fail to adapt their growth program in response to nutrient starvation and rapidly lose viability. Recently, the complexity of RAS/cAMP signaling has increased as a result of the discovery of a G-protein-coupled receptor system, consisting of GPR1 and its G
protein GPA2, that appears to act upstream of adenylate cyclase to stimulate cAMP production, probably in response to glucose (36, 40, 66). Moreover, cAMP production is a very fine-tuned process that is regulated at different levels involving, for instance, feedback loops and the action of phosphodiesterases (59). The way in which nutrients are sensed by the RAS/cAMP pathway remains unclear.
The precise mechanism(s) by which PKA controls cell growth is not known. It has long been known that the majority of downstream targets of PKA are enzymes involved in intermediary (carbon) metabolism (59). More recently, however, other PKA targets have emerged. For instance, PKA negatively regulates the transcription of a large number of stress-responsive genes by phosphorylating and inactivating MSN2 and probably MSN4 (20, 21, 58). The MSNs are redundant, stress element (STRE, AG4)-binding transcription activators (6, 41, 55). The MSNs are also negatively controlled by TOR, via the 14-3-3 proteins BMH1 and BMH2 (2, 5). Moreover, PKA negatively regulates RIM15, a kinase involved in the control of postdiauxic transcription (48, 51).
The RAS/cAMP pathway is connected to other nutrient-regulated signaling components, such as the kinase SCH9 (a yeast PKB homologue) and YAK1/SOK1 (see below) (59). A functional interaction between the RAS/cAMP pathway and TOR has also been suggested (2, 14), but this interaction has not been investigated directly and systematically.
Here we report that constitutive activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway suppresses a TOR deficiency. We also provide evidence for regulation of PKA and YAK1 localization by TOR. These findings suggest that the RAS/cAMP pathway is a TOR effector pathway distinct from the previously characterized TAP42/SIT4 pathway.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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, or JK9-3da. Strains from other laboratories, including the corresponding parental strains, are also listed in Table 1. Rich medium (YPD) or synthetic minimal medium (SD) complemented with the appropriate nutrients for plasmid maintenance were as described previously (3, 57). Nitrogen starvation experiments were performed with synthetic medium as previously described (54). Rapamycin was used at a final concentration of 200 ng/ml from a 1-mg/ml stock in 90% ethanol-10% Tween-20. Different incubation periods with rapamycin were used, depending on the readout being examined. Some readouts, due to their inherent delay in development, required longer incubation periods before they could be visualized.
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60 by inserting plasmid pTN9 into the PHO8 locus and excised as described previously (45). Strain TB105-3B (gln3 gat1) was used to isolate multicopy suppressors that confer increased rapamycin resistance. Isolation of the multicopy suppressors was performed using a 2µm, URA3 (pSEY18 backbone)-based library derived from strain R1 (27). Cells were allowed to recover from the transformation in liquid YPD at 30°C for 5 h before being plated on YPD containing 200 ng of rapamycin per ml. Rapamycin-resistant transformants were isolated and passaged through 5-fluoroorotic acid plates to demonstrate that the increased resistance to rapamycin was plasmid linked. Plasmids were rescued and retransformed into the parental strain to recheck resistance. Deletions and subclones were made to ascertain which open reading frame (ORF) on each clone was responsible for rapamycin resistance in a gln3 gat1 mutant.
Glycogen staining. Samples (7.5 optical density at 600 nm equivalents) from cultures treated with rapamycin or drug vehicle alone for 5 h were transferred to Millipore HA filters. The filters were subsequently placed on a solid agar matrix and exposed to iodine vapor as described previously (1).
Fluorescence microscopy. (i) Indirect immunofluorescence. To localize HXT1-HA3, GLN3-myc13, HA2-TPK1, HA-BCY1, and YAK1-myc13, cells were grown at 30°C and treated with rapamycin or drug vehicle alone for the indicated times. Tagged proteins were visualized by indirect immunofluorescence on whole fixed cells, as described previously (3). High-affinity monoclonal antibodies (mouse anti-HA [HA.11, clone 16B12; BabCO] and anti-myc [clone 9E10; kindly provided by H.-P. Hauri, Biozentrum, Basel, Switzerland]) and Cy3-conjugated rabbit anti-mouse immunoglobulin G (Molecular Probes) were used to visualize tagged proteins. DNA was stained with 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) at a concentration of 1 µg/ml. The cells were visualized with a Zeiss Axiophot microscope (100x objective).
(ii) GFP microscopy. Cells expressing MSN2-green fluorescent protein (GFP) were grown to logarithmic phase, treated with rapamycin or drug vehicle alone or shifted to nitrogen-free medium for 25 min, and fixed for 2 h in phosphate-buffered saline-formaldehyde (3.7% final concentration). After three washes with PBS, samples were observed by using a Zeiss Axioplan microscope (XBO 75 W/2 xenon short-arc lamp).
Immunoblotting. Whole-cell extracts for sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis were prepared by glass bead lysis as described previously (3). Phosphatase (10 mM NaF, 10 mM NaN3, 10 mM p-nitrophenylphosphate, 10 mM sodium pyrophosphate, 10 mM ß-glycerophosphate) and protease (1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, protease inhibitor cocktail tablets Complete [Roche Diagnostics]) inhibitors were added to the extraction buffer (120 mM NaCl, 50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5], 2 mM EDTA, 1% NP-40). The samples were denatured at 37°C for 15 min (HXT1 extracts) or 95°C for 5 min (NPR1 extracts). A total of 50 µg (HXT1 extracts) or 25 µg (NPR1 extracts) of protein was loaded per lane for standard SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting. For detection of HA-tagged proteins, a mouse anti-HA antibody (clone 12CA5) and horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary anti-mouse secondary antibodies and ECL reagents (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) were used.
RNA isolation and Northern blot analysis. RNA from cells treated with drug vehicle alone or rapamycin for the indicated times was analyzed. Total-RNA preparation and Northern blot analysis were performed by standard methods (11). Yeast DNA probes were generated by PCR using yeast genomic DNA as the template and oligonucleotide primers specific for the genes to be analyzed. PCR products were labeled with 32P-labeled phosphate by using a DecaLabel DNA labeling kit (MPI Fermentas).
Pol I and Pol III activity and [C3H3]methionine labeling. To monitor RNA polymerase I (Pol I) and Pol III activity, L-[methyl-3H]methionine ([C3H3]Met) labeling was performed essentially as described previously (49, 63). Cells were grown in synthetic complete medium (lacking methionine) to logarithmic phase and then treated with rapamycin or drug vehicle alone for 45 min. Subsequently, 75 µCi of [C3H3]Met (70 to 85 Ci/mmol, 185 MBq/ml; Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) was added to 0.75 optical density at 600 nm equivalent of cells, and the samples were incubated for 5 min at 30°C (typically in a reaction volume of 1.8 ml) to allow the incorporation of label into nascent rRNA and tRNA transcripts. Then 10% of the cells were collected on Whatman glass microfiber filters to control for label uptake. The remaining 90% were harvested by centrifugation, washed with water, and subjected to total-RNA preparation by standard methods (11). Uptake counts on the filters and isolated total RNA were subsequently subjected to analysis in a scintillation counter. Incorporated RNA counts were normalized to the uptake of the label by the corresponding cells. We noticed that sit4 mutant cells reproducibly displayed reduced label uptake in comparison to wild-type cells.
Autophagy (alkaline phosphatase) assay.
Progression of autophagy was analyzed by the increase of alkaline phosphatase activity in cells expressing a cytosolic proform of the alkaline phosphatase protein (PHO8
60) with 55 mM
-naphthyl phosphate as the substrate. The protein concentration of samples after glass bead extraction in assay buffer (250 mM Tris-HCl [pH 9.0], 10 mM MgSO4, 10 µM ZnSO4) was determined by the Bio-Rad microassay. The assay was basically performed as described previously (46), with samples being incubated for 20 min at 30°C and the fluorescence intensity of emission at 472 nm being monitored after excitation at 345 nm. For each sample, the alkaline phosphatase activity determined was normalized to the corresponding protein concentration.
| RESULTS |
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Given the above, one might expect that a reduction in RAS/cAMP signaling would result in rapamycin hypersensitivity. However, contrary to this expectation, loss-of-function mutations in RAS2 (ras2
) or TPK (tpk1w1 tpk2
tpk3
) did not confer rapamycin (1 to 5 ng/ml) hypersensitivity (data not shown). The RAS/cAMP pathway is essential, and the above mutations might not reduce RAS/cAMP signaling sufficiently to uncover a rapamycin-hypersensitive phenotype. It is worth noting that the tpk (tpk1w1 tpk2
tpk3
) mutant was originally selected as a strain in which PKA activity is uncoupled from nutrients and has elevated cAMP levels (8).
Activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway prevents rapamycin-induced nuclear translocation of MSN2, STRE-dependent transcription, and accumulation of glycogen. To understand how activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway contributes to increased rapamycin resistance, several TOR-controlled readouts were assayed in bcy1 or RAS2Val19 (RAS2V19) mutants, i.e., cells with an activated RAS/cAMP pathway. The readouts were examined in a wild-type GLN3 GAT1 strain to prevent indirect effects on the readouts due to rapamycin-resistant growth. We first investigated the localization of MSN2, using an MSN2-GFP fusion. As reported previously (2), MSN2 quickly translocated from the cytoplasm into the nucleus in wild-type cells treated with rapamycin. In cells with an activated RAS/cAMP pathway (bcy1 or RAS2Val19), however, the rapamycin-induced translocation of MSN2 to the nucleus was completely abolished (Fig. 2A). The nuclear accumulation of MSN2 typically seen on nitrogen (ammonium) starvation was also fully blocked by activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway (Fig. 2B). Thus, changes in MSN2 localization in response to TOR inactivation by rapamycin treatment or nitrogen starvation are prevented by activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway, suggesting that TOR and the RAS/cAMP pathway share downstream targets.
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Accumulation of the storage carbohydrate glycogen usually occurs on nutrient starvation and is an indicator of stationary phase. Barbet et al. have reported that cells treated with rapamycin strongly accumulate glycogen (1). As another TOR readout, we tested whether cells lacking BCY1 or expressing RAS2Val19 accumulate glycogen on rapamycin treatment. Wild-type, bcy1, and RAS2Val19 cells were treated with rapamycin and stained for glycogen by using iodine vapor. Whereas wild-type cells treated with rapamycin stained dark brown (indicating the accumulation of glycogen), bcy1 or RAS2Val19 cells showed no glycogen accumulation (Fig. 2D). The lack of rapamycin-induced glycogen accumulation by bcy1 or RAS2Val19 cells is contrary to a previous report (1), a discrepancy possibly due to strain variation.
To determine whether the repression of rapamycin-induced readouts by activation of RAS/cAMP signaling occurs only in strains with very elevated levels of PKA activity (bcy1 or RAS2Val19), we also investigated glycogen accumulation in bcy1 cells carrying a mutant TPK1 allele (tpk1w1) and lacking TPK2 and TPK3 (bcy1 tpk1w1 tpk2
tpk3
). These cells still display constitutive but not excessively elevated PKA activity, since they lack two of the three TPK genes and the tpk1w1 allele encodes a debilitated kinase (8). Similar to bcy1 or RAS2Val19 cells, bcy1 tpk1w1 tpk2
tpk3
cells did not accumulate glycogen following rapamycin treatment whereas the isogenic (parental) wild-type strain displayed strong rapamycin-induced glycogen accumulation (Fig. 2E). Thus, even moderate elevation of PKA activity is sufficient to prevent rapamycin-induced glycogen accumulation. This finding is in good agreement with our above observation that nonactivated alleles, such as wild-type TPK1 and SOK1, confer rapamycin resistance (Fig. 1).
In summary, activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway is sufficient to largely prevent the stress response and stationary-phase indicators associated with inactivation of TOR signaling. Cutler et al. have reported that activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway also prevents a rapamycin-induced block of pseudohyphal growth (14).
Activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway partly represses rapamycin-induced autophagy.
Autophagy, the bulk degradation of ribosomes and other cytoplasmic constituents on nutrient starvation, is negatively controlled by TOR via the APG1-APG13 complex (32, 46). We investigated whether activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway prevents rapamycin-induced autophagy. To monitor autophagy, we took advantage of a cytoplasmic proform of alkaline phosphatase (PHO8
60) (45). As reported previously (46), treatment of wild-type yeast cells with rapamycin resulted in a significant induction (approximately 10-fold, considered 100%) of autophagy, as assayed by alkaline phosphatase activity. Autophagy was induced only 20 or 40% in rapamycin-treated bcy1 or RAS2Val19 cells, respectively, indicating that activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway partly prevents autophagic processes induced on inactivation of TOR (Fig. 3). These results are consistent with previous reports demonstrating that exogenous cAMP prevents starvation- or rapamycin-mediated induction of autophagy (46).
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Activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway prevents rapamycin-induced down-regulation of the glucose transporter HXT1. Yeast cells possess a large number of functionally redundant HXT genes that encode hexose (glucose) transporters belonging to the major facilitator superfamily of transporters. Via the combined action of different regulatory mechanisms, only the glucose transporters appropriate for the amount of extracellular glucose are expressed and/or maintained at any given time (reviewed in reference 47). The HXT1 gene encodes a major, low-affinity, high-capacity glucose transporter that is present when glucose is abundant, i.e., under favorable growth conditions. TOR controls, via the kinase NPR1, the sorting and thereby the stability of the high-affinity tryptophan permease, TAT2. On TOR inactivation, TAT2 is targeted to the vacuole and degraded (3). To investigate if TOR signaling also regulates the major hexose transporter, HXT1, we examined the expression of C-terminally HA-tagged HXT1 in rapamycin-treated cells by immunoblotting. Rapamycin treatment resulted in loss of the HXT1 signal, indicating that TOR maintains HXT1 (Fig. 5A). This finding suggests that HXT1 is a (heretofore unknown) target of TOR signaling. We also examined the subcellular localization of HXT1 in rapamycin-treated cells by indirect immunofluorescence of whole fixed cells. Whereas HXT1 was located mainly at the plasma membrane (rim staining) in control cells, rapamycin treatment resulted in a significant reduction in the amount of plasma membrane-localized HXT1 and the appearance of a signal in intracellular compartments, possibly the vacuole or other "degradation" compartments (Fig. 5B). Interestingly, the rapamycin-induced down-regulation of HXT1 was blocked in sla2 or rsp5 mutant cells, as observed by immunoblotting (data not shown). SLA2 (also called END4) is required for the endocytosis of several plasma membrane proteins (50), and RSP5 (also called NPI1) encodes a ubiquitin protein ligase (26), indicating that rapamycin-induced HXT1 down-regulation requires ubiquitination and endocytosis. Therefore, TOR appears to broadly control the stability of nutrient transporters, possibly to adjust the import rate of diverse nutrients to the growth rate. Interestingly, mTOR also controls several mammalian nutrient transporters, possibly including the principal glucose transporter Glut1 (18).
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TOR-controlled, TAP42/SITA-mediated events and TOR-controlled, RAS/cAMP-related readouts define distinct rapamycin-sensitive signaling pathways. On TOR inactivation by nutrient depletion or rapamycin treatment, the TAP42 inhibitor protein dissociates from the phosphatase SIT4, resulting in SIT4 activation and, subsequently, SIT4-mediated dephosphorylation of the GATA factor GLN3 and the kinase NPR1 (2, 29). To further understand the specificity of the effects of RAS/cAMP signaling on TOR-controlled readouts, we investigated whether activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway affects the SIT4-dependent readouts GLN3 and NPR1. As described previously (2), GLN3 efficiently translocated from the cytoplasm to the nucleus in rapamycin-treated wild-type cells (Fig. 6A). In bcy1 or RAS2Val19 cells, the nuclear translocation of GLN3 observed upon rapamycin treatment was similar to that observed in wild-type cells (Fig. 6A). Thus, activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway does not affect TOR signaling through TAP42 and SIT4 to GLN3. This accounts for the earlier observation that an activated RAS/cAMP pathway confers rapamycin resistance only in a gln3 (and gat1) mutant background.
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Moreover, and in good agreement with the results obtained for NPR1, an activated RAS/cAMP pathway (bcy1 and RAS2Val19) did not prevent the rapamycin-induced degradation of the tryptophan permease TAT2 (data not shown). This again indicates that rapamycin-induced, TAP42/SIT4-regulated events are not affected by activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway. Given the apparent difference in TOR signaling to HXT1 (RAS/cAMP) and TAT2 (TAP42) stability, the common involvement of ubiquitination (RSP5) and endocytosis (SLA2) in the degradation of HXT1 (see above) and TAT2 (3) may reflect a general rather than a TOR-specific requirement.
In summary, activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway prevents some rapamycin-induced readouts, such as MSN2 translocation, ribosome biogenesis, and HXT1 down-regulation, but does not overcome other rapamycin-induced readouts, such as GLN3 translocation, NPR1 dephosphorylation, and TAT2 degradation. The readouts that are not prevented by RAS/cAMP correspond to those controlled by TAP42/SIT4. The different signaling components for different TOR readouts suggest a signaling bifurcation downstream of TOR. To examine this suggestion, we investigated whether the absence of SIT4 (or, in some cases, the presence of a rapamycin-resistance allele of TAP42, tap42-11 [16]) affects the TOR-controlled readouts that were demonstrated above to be prevented by activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway. Rapamycin-induced translocation of MSN2, in contrast to GLN3 relocalization or NPR1 dephosphorylation, was not blocked in a sit4 or tap42-11 mutant (reference 2 and data not shown). In agreement with this finding, sit4 and tap42-11 mutants displayed wild-type-like glycogen accumulation and (for sit4) HSP12 induction on rapamycin treatment (Fig. 2C and D). Furthermore, transcription of the RP genes RPL30 and RPS26A was reduced in rapamycin-treated sit4 cells, as in wild-type cells (Fig. 4A). Moreover, Pol I and Pol III activity, assayed by biosynthetic methylation of rRNA and tRNA, was reduced approximately fourfold in sit4 mutant cells on rapamycin treatment, a reduction similar to that obtained with wild-type cells (Fig. 4B). Finally, rapamycin-induced down-regulation of the hexose transporter HXT1 occurred in sit4 and tap42-11 cells (Fig. 5A). Therefore, a sit4 mutation did not affect the readouts shown above to be affected by the RAS/cAMP pathway. Taken together, these results suggest that TAP42/SIT4 and RAS/cAMP signaling do indeed function in separate rapamycin-sensitive signaling pathways downstream of TOR.
Interestingly, rapamycin-induced autophagy was reduced in sit4, bcy1, and RAS2Val19 cells. In the absence of SIT4, rapamycin treatment induced autophagy to about 55% of wild-type levels (Fig. 3), indicating that a sit4 mutation blocks autophagy but does so less effectively than does activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway. Therefore, contrary to the seemingly separate control of different TOR readouts by TAP42/SIT4 and RAS/cAMP described above, SIT4 and RAS/cAMP may jointly control autophagy. Given the complexity of the autophagic process (formation and trafficking of large membrane structures), a contribution of both pathways to the control of autophagy is plausible (10, 32, 46).
TOR controls the localization of TPK1 and YAK1. Recent studies have established that PKA localization in S. cerevisiae is regulated by cAMP levels. Deprivation of cAMP in rapidly growing yeast cells results in a pronounced nuclear accumulation of the PKA catalytic subunit TPK1. cAMP addition, which activates PKA via dissociation of the TPK-BCY1 complex, leads to rapid relocalization of TPK1 to the cytoplasm. The regulatory (kinase-inhibitory) BCY1 subunit remains localized in the nucleus in the presence and absence of cAMP. Hence, catalytically inactive PKA appears to reside in the nucleus (22, 23). To investigate how TOR and the RAS/cAMP pathway cooperate in signaling to cell growth readouts, we examined TPK1 and BCY1 localization in rapamycin-treated cells. Single-copy, HA-tagged versions of TPK1 and BCY1 expressed under the control of their own promoters were constructed and used to determine the subcellular localization of TPK1 and BCY1. In control cells, TPK1 was generally distributed throughout the cell; on rapamycin treatment, TPK1 accumulated in the nucleus, as observed previously in cAMP-deprived cells (Fig. 7A). The localization of BCY1 was not significantly altered on rapamycin treatment; i.e., BCY1 remained nuclear (Fig. 7A). Thus, similar to cAMP deprivation, rapamycin treatment induces the nuclear accumulation and presumably BCY1 binding of TPK1, suggesting that TOR maintains PKA activity. That TOR maintains PKA activity also explains the suppression of a TOR deficiency by activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway.
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We also observed that HA-TPK1 expression is reproducibly and significantly reduced in bcy1 cells. The TPK1 promoter contains several putative MSN-binding STRE elements (43). In a bcy1 mutant, MSN2 and MSN4 remain cytoplasmic (see above) and thus presumably unable to activate TPK1 expression.
As mentioned above, deletion of YAK1 in a gln3 gat1 mutant background also confers resistance to rapamycin. Moreover, YAK1 accumulates in the nucleus in response to nutrient starvation (42). To investigate if YAK1, like TPK1, is controlled by TOR, we examined YAK1 localization in rapamycin-treated cells. Whereas YAK1 was generally distributed throughout the cell in control cells, we observed a pronounced nuclear YAK1 signal in rapamycin-treated cells, indicating that YAK1 localization is controlled by TOR (Fig. 7B). In summary, TOR controls the localization, and therefore possibly the activity, of both TPK1 and YAK1, suggesting that TOR signals through the RAS/cAMP pathway.
| DISCUSSION |
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An alternative model for how TOR impinges on RAS/cAMP signaling is that the RAS/cAMP pathway and an unknown, rapamycin-sensitive TAP42/SIT4-independent pathway converge on several common targets. This model seems unlikely because it requires that TOR and the RAS/cAMP pathway converge simultaneously on several targets and because of the finding that TOR controls PKA localization (Fig. 7A). However, TOR and the RAS/cAMP pathway may converge at least on the stress transcription factors MSN2 and MSN4. Others have reported that TOR and the RAS/cAMP pathway appear to signal in parallel to MSN2 (20, 21).
The two models described above are not mutually exclusive. TOR may intersect with the RAS/cAMP pathway at more than one level. Cross talk between signaling pathways is a common theme in growth control. Of particular relevance is the link between mTOR signaling and the PI3K/PDK1/PKB pathway in mammalian cells. This link involves both convergence on common targets, such as S6K or 4E-BP, and a regulator-effector relationship in which PKB controls mTOR via the TSC complex (see the introduction) (30). Interestingly, the mTOR and PKA signaling pathways in mammalian cells have also recently been linked as mediators of the cardiomyocyte response to glutamine (65).
Ribosome biogenesis is a major consumer of the cell's energy resources, and its regulation is therefore of particular importance in the context of cell growth control. Growth-controlling transcription of RP genes involves PKA-dependent regulation of the transcription factor RAP1 (34). Depletion of cAMP or nutrient starvation leads to repression of RP mRNA levels. However, it has also been proposed that nutrient availability may induce the expression of RP genes by a mechanism independent of the RAS/cAMP pathway (44). We found that activation of the RAS/cAMP pathway prevents the down-regulation of ribosome biogenesis (RP gene, rRNA and tRNA transcription) on TOR inhibition (Fig. 4). Also, we found that TOR-regulated ribosome biogenesis is independent of SIT4 (Fig. 4), in agreement with the recent report by Duvel et al. that TAP42 inactivation does not affect the expression of RP genes and their rapamycin-induced repression (17). Definition of the critical upstream nutrient signals and dissection of the transcriptional effectors involved in the TOR-mediated control of ribosome biogenesis should provide further insight into how TOR signals in conjunction with the RAS/cAMP pathway to regulate ribosome biogenesis and cell growth.
In summary, our results suggest that TOR, via different effector pathways, signals to different growth-related readouts. Furthermore, our findings link the TOR and RAS/cAMP pathways, the two major nutrient-responsive, growth-controlling pathways in yeast. Elucidation of the precise nature of the relationship between these two pathways and the identification of linking components will provide further insight into how TOR and RAS/cAMP jointly contribute to the control of yeast cell growth.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported by grants from the Canton of Basel and the Swiss National Science Foundation to M.N.H.
| FOOTNOTES |
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Present address: Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115. ![]()
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