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Mol. Cell. Biol., Aug 1996, 4478-4485, Vol 16, No. 8
A Couve and JP Hirsch
The yeast pheromone response pathway is mediated by two G protein- linked
receptors, each of which is expressed only in its specific cell type. The
STE3DAF mutation results in inappropriate expression of the a- factor
receptor in MATa cells. Expression of this receptor in the inappropriate
cell type confers resistance to pheromone-induced G1 arrest, a phenomenon
that we have termed receptor inhibition. The ability of STE3DAF cells to
cycle in the presence of pheromone was found to correlate with reduced
phosphorylation of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor Far1p. Measurement
of Fus3p mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase activity in wild-type and
STE3DAF cells showed that induction of Fus3p activity was the same in both
strains at times of up to 1 h after pheromone treatment. However, after 2
or more hours, Fus3p activity declined in STE3DAF cells but remained high
in wild-type cells. The level of inducible FUS1 RNA paralleled the changes
seen in Fus3p activity. Short-term activation of the Fus3p MAP kinase is
therefore sufficient for the early transcriptional induction response to
pheromone, but sustained activation is required for cell cycle arrest.
Escape from the cell cycle arrest response was not seen in wild- type cells
treated with low doses of pheromone, indicating that receptor inhibition is
not simply a result of weak signaling but rather acts selectively at late
times during the response. STE3DAF was found to inhibit the pheromone
response pathway at a step between the G beta subunit and Ste5p, the
scaffolding protein that binds the components of the MAP kinase
phosphorylation cascade. Overexpression of Ste20p, a kinase thought to act
between the G protein and the MAP kinase cascade, suppressed the STE3DAF
phenotype. These findings are consistent with a model in which receptor
inhibition acts by blocking the signaling pathway downstream of G protein
dissociation and upstream of MAP kinase cascade activation, at a step that
could directly involve Ste20p.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Loss of sustained Fus3p kinase activity and the G1 arrest response in cells expressing an inappropriate pheromone receptor
Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 10029, USA.
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