Interspecies variation reveals a conserved repressor of α-specific genes in Saccharomyces yeasts

  1. Oliver A. Zill and
  2. Jasper Rine1
  1. Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, and California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, California 94720, USA

Abstract

The mating-type determination circuit in Saccharomyces yeast serves as a classic paradigm for the genetic control of cell type in all eukaryotes. Using comparative genetics, we discovered a central and conserved, yet previously undetected, component of this genetic circuit: active repression of α-specific genes in a cells. Upon inactivation of the SUM1 gene in Saccharomyces bayanus, a close relative of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a cells acquired mating characteristics of α cells and displayed autocrine activation of their mating response pathway. Sum1 protein bound to the promoters of α-specific genes, repressing their transcription. In contrast to the standard model, α1 was important but not required for α-specific gene activation and mating of α cells in the absence of Sum1. Neither Sum1 protein expression, nor its association with target promoters was mating-type-regulated. Thus, the α1/Mcm1 coactivators did not overcome repression by occluding Sum1 binding to DNA. Surprisingly, the mating-type regulatory function of Sum1 was conserved in S. cerevisiae. We suggest that a comprehensive understanding of some genetic pathways may be best attained through the expanded phenotypic space provided by study of those pathways in multiple related organisms.

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