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Analysis of the Seven-Member AAD Gene Set Demonstrates That Genetic Redundancy in Yeast May Be More Apparent Than Real
Daniela Delneria, David C. J. Gardnera, and Stephen G. Oliveraa Department Biomolecular Sciences, University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology, Manchester M60 1QD, United Kingdom
Corresponding author: Stephen G. Oliver, School of Biological Sciences, University of Manchester, 2.205 Stopford Bldg., Oxford Rd., Manchester M13 9PT, United Kingdom., steve.oliver{at}man.ac.uk (E-mail)
Communicating editor: M. JOHNSTON
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
Saccharomyces cerevisiae has seven genes encoding proteins with a high degree (>85%) of amino-acid sequence identity to the aryl-alcohol dehydrogenase of the lignin-degrading, filamentous fungus, Phanerochaete chrysosporium. All but one member of this gene set are telomere associated. Moreover, all contain a sequence similar to the DNA-binding site of the Yap1p transcriptional activator either upstream of or within their coding sequences. The expression of the AAD genes was found to be induced by chemicals, such as diamide and diethyl maleic acid ester (DEME), that cause an oxidative shock by inactivating the glutathione (GSH) reservoir of the cells. In contrast, the oxidizing agent hydrogen peroxide has no effect on the expression of these genes. We found that the response to anti-GSH agents was Yap1p dependent. The very high level of nucleotide sequence similarity between the AAD genes makes it difficult to determine if they are all involved in the oxidative-stress response. The use of single and multiple aad deletants demonstrated that only AAD4 (YDL243c) and AAD6 (YFL056/57c) respond to the oxidative stress. Of these two genes, only AAD4 is likely to be functional since the YFL056/57c open reading frame is interrupted by a stop codon. Thus, in terms of the function in response to oxidative stress, the sevenfold redundancy of the AAD gene set is more apparent than real.
THE complete genome sequence of the brewers' and bakers' yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae (![]()
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These duplicated open reading frames (ORFs) are arranged in blocks, called cluster homology regions (CHRs; ![]()
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These different mechanisms for gene duplication are probably insufficient to account for the full extent of redundancy in the yeast genome. ![]()
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It was ![]()
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The S. cerevisiae genome contains six telomere-associated ORFs whose predicted protein products are very similar (>85% amino-acid sequence identity) to aryl-alcohol dehydrogenase (AAD; ![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Strains and media:
The S. cerevisiae strains YPH499 (MATa ura3-52 lys2-801amber ade2-101ochre trp1-
63 his3-
200 leu2-
1) and YPH500 (MAT
ura3-52 lys2-801amber ade2-101ochre trp1-
63 his3-
200 leu2-
1) were obtained from Phil Hieter (University of British Columbia; ![]()
![]()
was obtained from Cristina Merlotti (University of Manchester). For routine culture, S. cerevisiae was grown on 2% yeast extract, 1% peptone, and 2% glucose (YPD). Glucose minimal medium (SD) contained 0.67% yeast nitrogen base (Difco Laboratories, Detroit), 0.5% ammonium sulfate, and 2% glucose. Amino acids or nucleic acid bases were added where required at the concentration of 20 mg/liter.
Informatic tools:
Homology searches were carried out on DNA sequences against the EMBL and GenBank databases using BLAST e-mail server facility (![]()
![]()
![]()
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Preparation of total RNA:
Yeast cells were cultured under a number of different physiological conditions to assess AAD gene expression:
- Noninduced: yeast were cultured in YPD or SD at 30° until OD600 = 0.7.
- Hydrogen peroxide shock: yeast cells were cultured in YPD or SD at 30° until OD600 = 0.5, then hydrogen peroxide was added to a final concentration of either 0.4 or 1 mM. The cultures were allowed to grow for a further hour, following the shock.
- General oxidative shock: yeast cells were cultured in YPD or SD at 30° until OD600 = 0.5, then either diamide or DEME was added at a final concentration of 4.5 or 6 mM, respectively. The cultures were allowed to grow for a further hour following the addition of these agents.
Total RNA was prepared as described by ![]()
Northern hybridization:
Plasmid G5 (![]()
|
Northern hybridization was carried out according to the method of ![]()
The amount of radioactivity in a hybridization band was quantified using a molecular imager system (GS-363; Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA). The relative abundance of the AAD transcripts was determined by comparison with the amount of the rRNA in the same lane.
DNA sequencing:
Sequencing of genomic copies of AAD6 and AAD10 was conducted in the manner described by ![]()
| RESULTS |
|---|
Informatic analysis:
All seven ORFs (YNL331c, YDL243c, YCR107w, YJR155w, YFL056, YFL057c, YOL165c) were found to exhibit significant similarity to the oxidoreductase family of proteins, with the highest similarity (~70% sequence identity) to the AAD of the lignin-degrading fungus P. chrysosporium (![]()
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|
Only the protein products of AAD14, AAD4, and AAD3 have a length comparable to that of the P. chrysosporium AAD enzyme. YFL056c and YFL057c are two contiguous small ORFs of about half the size of the P. chrysosporium AAD gene and correspond, respectively, to the N-terminal and C-terminal halves of the AAD polypeptide. These two small ORFs, are displaced by a -1 frameshift between nucleotides 14914 and 14915 in the chromosome VI sequence (![]()
![]()
Both the frameshift between ORFs YFL056c/YFL057c and the stop codon within the YJR155+w may have been the result of sequencing errors, so both DNA regions were resequenced using, for each chromosome, two independently generated PCR products produced by amplifying genomic DNA from strain YPH499 (see MATERIALS AND METHODS). The new sequencing data confirmed the previous results, suggesting that AAD6 and AAD10 may not be functional genes. In addition to YJR155w, another ORF, YOL165c, has an N-terminal deletion corresponding to 61% of the P. chrysosporium AAD polypeptide. However, in this case, we can find no ORF with apparent similarity to the fungal AAD enzyme, either upstream of the start codon of YOL165c or downstream from its stop codon. It is, therefore, unlikely that AAD15 specifies a functional oxidoreductase.
The telomere-associated members (AAD3, AAD4, AAD6, AAD10, AAD14, and AAD15) likely form a true gene family, while AAD16 is more distantly related. Comparison of the DNA sequences of the promoter and the terminator regions of each member of the gene family reveals that the region upstream of AAD15 is not similar to the region upstream of other family members, which all display a significant degree of sequence homology to each other in these two DNA regions. This homology extends for ~500 bp upstream of the ATG and 2000 bp downstream of the stop codon. The downstream homology regions include a second ORF, which in the case of AAD6 (ORF YFL056/YFL057c) is a gene of known function, THI5 (YFL058c) (Figure 1). The ORFs downstream of AAD4, AAD10, and AAD14 are all transcribed from the opposite DNA strand and all appear to be homologues of THI5 (![]()
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|
This analysis suggests that there has been a duplication of a telomeric region of ~4000 bp between chromosomes III, IV, VI, X, and XIV. It is not clear whether this duplication occurred before the postulated complete duplication of the yeast genome (![]()
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|
AAD transcription responds to oxidative stress:
To determine whether the seven members of the AAD gene set were functionally redundant, we decided to examine whether or not they were coordinately regulated. As a first step, yeast grown under a number of different physiological conditions were examined for the presence of AAD gene transcripts. These conditions were designed to include situations (such as stationary phase, nitrogen starvation, and the presence of an aromatic aldehyde) that are relevant to the role of the AAD enzyme in P. chrysosporium (![]()
|
Having detected the presence of AAD mRNA under oxidative stress conditions, it was possible to use our collection of aad deletion mutants (![]()
|
Stress-dependent AAD transcription requires a functional YAP1 gene:
The oxidative stress response in S. cerevisiae is mediated by the transcriptional activator, Yap1p (![]()
yap1). The results (Figure 5) demonstrated that AAD transcription in response to either DEME or diamide was absolutely dependent on YAP1. We searched the sequences of the AAD genes for close matches to the site to which Yap1p binds (TTACTAA; ![]()
|
No AAD transcript was detected in the mRNA sample from the double mutant aad4
aad6
, while it was present in the samples from other multiple mutants as long as either AAD4 or AAD6 was still present in the genome (Figure 6). This suggests that only two genes in the seven-member AAD gene set are expressed during oxidative stress. Because the AAD6 ORF is nonfunctional, only one of these two genes is likely to encode a functional product. Plate assays were performed to monitor sensitivity to DEME. The septuple mutant showed increased resistance to this agent. This result may suggest a role for the AAD gene set in "gating" the response to oxidative stress. However, no difference was seen between the wild-type response to DEME and that of the quadruple mutant, aad3
aad14
aad6
aad10
(in which only the marker KanMX was used for the gene deletion). Moreover, similar results were found when comparing the wild-type and the double mutant aad4
aad6
. Given that nutritional markers were used to make the gene replacements for AAD16, AAD4, and AAD15 in the septuple mutant (![]()
![]()
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
The very high level of apparent genetic redundancy (![]()
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We decided to investigate the AAD gene set for a number of reasons. First, at seven members, it is one of the largest sets in the S. cerevisiae genome. Second, the set contains a family of six genes that exhibit a high degree of internal homology (>80% amino-acid sequence identity) and might thus be expected to exhibit genuine functional redundancy. Finally, although yeast is not a lignin degrader, our studies have confirmed that it does exhibit an aryl-alcohol dehydrogenase activity since stationary phase cultures can convert aromatic aldehydes into their corresponding alcohols (![]()
YFL056c, YFL057c, and YOL165c are unlikely to be functional genes, since a frameshift splits the protein encoded by YFL056c and YFL057c, and YOL165c carries a deletion of ~60% of its 5' end. The YJR155w ORF is truncated by a stop codon located 228 bp downstream of the ATG. We do not know whether this deletion compromises AAD10 function. Moreover, it is possible that the effects of the stop codon are ameliorated by translational read-through; the UAG terminator could be decoded as glutamine by the normal Glu tRNA using a first-position wobble interaction (P. FARABAUGH, personal communication). Indeed, the UAG codon in ORF YJR155+w occurs at a site occupied by a glutamine codon in the AAD reading frames.
The six members of the AAD gene family comprise three pairs (AAD3 + AAD15, AAD6 + AAD4, AAD10 + AAD14, Figure 2) whose two genes are more related to one another than to the other four members of the family. The six members of the AAD gene family are contained within subtelomeric CHRs, and the IV-L, X-R, and XV-L segments derive, respectively, from the CHRs on chromosomes VI-L, XIV-L, and III-R (or vice versa). This could indicate that there were already three members of the AAD family prior to the duplication of the yeast genome postulated by ![]()
In considering the likely biological role of any novel gene revealed by systematic genome sequencing, the first recourse is to informatic analysis (e.g., ![]()
![]()
It is well established that exposure of yeast cells to agents such as H2O2, diamide, and DEME causes the expression of various oxidoreductase genes via the action of the Yap1 transcription factor (![]()
![]()
![]()
strain enabled us to demonstrate that members of the AAD gene family are targets for the action of Yap1p. However, the Yap1-mediated expression of AAD genes only responded to the indirect oxidative stress mediated by anti-glutathione agents, such as DEME. Oxidizing agents, such as H2O2, failed to evoke AAD gene expression. Recent studies (![]()
![]()
It is not possible to distinguish any differences in the expression of the six members of the AAD gene family in response to DEME addition because the nucleotide sequences of these genes are too similar to allow any single-ORF probe to distinguish between them. Therefore, we turned to our collection of single and multiple aad deletion mutants (![]()
Hybridization array technology has been used to try to discover all the genes under Yap1p control (![]()
Given the fact that AAD6 contains a frameshift in the middle of its ORF, the AAD4 gene would appear to be the only member of the gene set that expresses a functional protein in response to oxidative shock. It is possible that other members of the AAD family are transcribed under different physiological conditions that we have yet to investigate. What is clear from our study is that, as far as the oxidative stress response is concerned, the apparent sevenfold redundancy of the AAD gene set reduces to a single functional gene, AAD4. We suggest that this is unlikely to be a unique case and that the extensive genetic redundancy revealed by the complete genome sequence of S. cerevisiae is more apparent than real.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Phil Farabaugh, Barbara Hahn-Hagerdahl, Derek Jamieson, and Linda Partridge for useful discussions; Andrew Hayes, Gregory Tomlin, Cristina Merlotti, and Simon Hubbard for their help and advice; and Carlo Bruschi for his encouragement. This work was supported by a Training and Mobility of Researchers Fellowship from the European Commission (EC) to D.D. and by a contract under the European Functional Analysis Network programme of the EC to S.G.O.
Manuscript received April 27, 1999; Accepted for publication August 13, 1999.
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