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Std1p (Msn3p) Positively Regulates the Snf1 Kinase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Sergei Kuchina, Valmik K. Vyasb, Ellen Kantera, Seung-Pyo Honga, and Marian Carlsona,ba Departments of Genetics and Development and Microbiology, Molecular and Biophysical Studies, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032
b Integrated Program in Cellular, Molecular and Biophysical Studies, Columbia University, New York, New York 10032
Corresponding author: Marian Carlson, HSC922, New York, NY 10032., mbc1{at}columbia.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: B. J. ANDREWS
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
The Snf1 protein kinase of the glucose signaling pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is regulated by an autoinhibitory interaction between the regulatory and catalytic domains of Snf1p. Transitions between the autoinhibited and active states are controlled by an upstream kinase and the Reg1p-Glc7p protein phosphatase 1. Previous studies suggested that Snf1 kinase activity is also modulated by Std1p (Msn3p), which interacts physically with Snf1p and also interacts with glucose sensors. Here we address the relationship between Std1p and the Snf1 kinase. Two-hybrid assays showed that Std1p interacts with the catalytic domain of Snf1p, and analysis of mutant kinases suggested that this interaction is incompatible with the autoinhibitory interaction of the regulatory and catalytic domains. Overexpression of Std1p increased the two-hybrid interaction of Snf1p with its activating subunit Snf4p, which is diagnostic of an open, uninhibited conformation of the kinase complex. Overexpression of Std1p elevated Snf1 kinase activity in both in vitro and in vivo assays. These findings suggest that Std1p stimulates the Snf1 kinase by an interaction with the catalytic domain that antagonizes autoinhibition and promotes an active conformation of the kinase.
THE Snf1 kinase of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a member of the Snf1/AMP-activated protein kinase family, which is highly conserved in eukaryotes and is important for responses to metabolic stress (![]()
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The Snf1 kinase complex contains the catalytic (
) subunit Snf1p, the stimulatory (
) subunit Snf4p, and one of the three ß-subunits, Sip1p, Sip2p, or Gal83p; the ß-subunit maintains the association of Snf1p and Snf4p in the complex, mediates interactions with downstream targets, and regulates the subcellular localization of the kinase (![]()
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Previous studies showed that the Snf1 kinase complex undergoes glucose-regulated conformational changes (![]()
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In addition to the above mechanisms for regulation of Snf1 kinase activity, the homologous proteins encoded by the STD1 (MSN3) and MTH1 (HTR1, DGT1, BPC1, and GSF1) genes have been implicated in regulation of Snf1 function. STD1 was identified as a multicopy suppressor of defects caused by overexpression of a truncated TATA-binding protein (TBP; ![]()
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mutant and also partially relieved glucose repression of SUC2 in wild-type cells (![]()
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Std1p and Mth1p also have roles in one of the glucose signaling pathways. These proteins interact with the glucose sensors Snf3p and Rgt2p in the two-hybrid system and regulate the expression of HXT (hexose transporter) genes in response to glucose signals (![]()
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mth1
double mutant are not easily attributable to altered glucose transporter expression, such as impaired growth on galactose and glycerol, reduced derepression of invertase activity, and a defect in sporulation of the homozygous diploid (![]()
mth1
mutant is partially impaired for Snf1 function.
Here we address the relationship between Std1p and the Snf1 kinase. We show that Std1p interacts directly with the catalytic domain of Snf1p and stimulates kinase activity. We present evidence that the regulatory mechanism involves antagonism of the autoinhibitory interaction of the Snf1p regulatory and catalytic domains.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Strains:
S. cerevisiae strains used here were CTY10-5d (MATa ade2 his3 leu2 trp1 URA3::lexAop-lacZ gal4 gal80), TAT7 (MATa ade2 his3 leu2 trp1 ura3::lexAop-lacZ LYS2::lexAop-HIS3 gal80), FY250 (MAT
his3
200 leu2
1 trp1
63 ura3-52) and MCY2635 (MATa snf4-
2 ura3-52 his3
200). Cultures were grown in synthetic complete (SC) medium (![]()
Plasmids:
Plasmids used in this study are listed in Table 1. pSK79 contains the STD1 BamHI fragment from pJH125 (![]()
![]()
|
ß-Galactosidase assays:
Filter lift assays for blue color were performed as described previously (![]()
![]()
Immune complex kinase assays and immunoblots:
Preparation of protein extracts, immunoprecipitation, and immune complex kinase assays were performed as described previously (![]()
| RESULTS |
|---|
Std1p interacts with the catalytic domain of Snf1p:
We first used the two-hybrid system to investigate the requirements for physical interaction between the Snf1 kinase and Std1p. Snf1p is the subunit of the kinase that interacts with Std1p, as no interaction was detected with Snf4p in two-hybrid or GST pull-down assays (![]()
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|
The inactive Snf1-K84R and Snf1-T210A kinases differ with respect to their ability to undergo glucose-regulated conformational changes; the T210A mutation impairs the release of autoinhibition and the binding of Snf4 to the regulatory domain (![]()
![]()
To map the region of Snf1p that interacts with Std1p, we used LexA fusions to the Snf1p catalytic domain (KD; residues 1392) and the negative regulatory domain (RD; residues 392 to the end). In the filter assay, GAD-Std1 interacted with LexA-KD but not with LexA-RD (Fig 2A). GAD-Std1 also interacted with the mutant LexA-KD-K84R, confirming that catalytic activity is not required. Moreover, GAD-Std1 interacted with LexA-KD-T210A, indicating that in the absence of the Snf1p regulatory domain, interaction does not require T210 or its phosphorylation. In quantitative assays of cells growing in 2% glucose, ß-galactosidase activity was not affected by the T210A mutation in LexA-KD (Fig 2B).
Because T210 is required for interaction of Std1p with the intact Snf1p, but not with the isolated catalytic domain, these results strongly suggest that Std1p interacts with the intact Snf1 kinase complex in its open conformation, in which the catalytic domain is not inhibited by the regulatory domain.
Std1p overexpression increases the two-hybrid interaction of Snf1p with its activating subunit Snf4p during growth in glucose:
We next assayed the effects of Std1p on the two-hybrid interaction of Snf1p with Snf4p, which is diagnostic of the open conformation of the kinase complex (Fig 1). Although native Snf1p and Snf4p remain associated in a complex due to the ß-subunit (![]()
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|
We also assayed the interaction of LexA-Snf1 and Snf4-GAD in std1
and std1
mth1
mutants, and interaction was glucose-regulated as in the wild type (data not shown), indicating that the presence of Std1p at its native levels is indistinguishable from the absence of Std1p. Thus, the effects of Std1p depend on its overexpression at levels comparable to those of Snf1p (both expressed from the ADH1 promoter). This dosage sensitivity supports the idea that Std1p influences the Snf1p-Snf4p interaction by direct binding to Snf1p.
Std1p overexpression increases Snf1 activity in immune complex kinase assays:
The effects of Std1p overexpression on the two-hybrid interaction of Snf1p and Snf4p suggested that Std1p correspondingly stimulates kinase activity. We used an immune complex kinase assay to assess the effects of overexpressed Std1p on Snf1 kinase activity in vitro; previous studies did not detect any effect of STD1 in multicopy (![]()
-32P]ATP. Overexpression of HA-Std1 increased the phosphorylation of the ß-subunits Sip1 and Gal83 (Sip2 was not detected) and the phosphorylation of LexA-Snf1 (Fig 3). Control experiments with LexA-Snf1-K84R confirmed that Snf1 kinase activity was responsible for phosphorylation of the ß-subunits; this mutant kinase has some residual autophosphorylation activity. Immunoblot analysis of the precipitated proteins also confirmed that amounts of the LexA protein were comparable in all lanes.
|
Std1p stimulates Snf1 kinase activity in an in vivo assay:
We also used an in vivo assay to assess the effects of Std1p on Snf1 kinase activity. We previously showed that a catalytically hyperactive kinase, LexA-Snf1-G53R, activates transcription of a lacZ reporter containing LexA-binding sites in response to glucose limitation (![]()
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|
We used this assay to assess the effects of Std1p overexpression on Snf1 activity in vivo (Fig 4B). LexA-Snf1, expressed from the ADH1 promoter, did not significantly stimulate transcription of the reporter, as found previously. However, when Std1p was overexpressed, LexA-Snf1 caused low-level expression of the reporter in glucose-grown cells and substantial expression in response to glucose depletion (67 units of ß-galactosidase activity). ß-Galactosidase activity was similarly elevated in raffinose-grown cells (28 units; see Table 2). LexA-Std1 alone does not activate transcription of a reporter, indicating that recruitment of Std1p to the promoter is not sufficient. Assays of LexA-Snf1-K84R confirmed the dependence on kinase activity, and the Gal83p subunit of the kinase was required (data not shown), as found previously for LexA-Snf1-G53R (![]()
Overexpression of Std1p also affected LexA-Snf1-G53R function. In glucose-grown cells, activation of the reporter was increased sixfold; however, activity in glucose-limited cells, already high, was not further elevated (Fig 4B). In an std1
mth1
double mutant, activation by LexA-Snf1-G53R was not impaired (data not shown), consistent with the preceding evidence that when Snf1p is overexpressed, the absence of Std1p is indistinguishable from its presence at native levels.
Overexpression of Std1p suppresses snf4
mutant defects in growth on galactose and glycerol:
Previous studies showed that the std1
mth1
mutant exhibits defects in Snf1-dependent processes that are not related to glucose transport (![]()
mutant, which lacks the activating subunit of the kinase, is defective in utilization of both carbon sources. Transformation of a snf4
mutant with a multicopy plasmid carrying STD1 improved growth on both galactose and glycerol (Fig 5).
|
Std1p and Mth1p have distinct functional relationships to the Snf1 kinase:
Std1p and Mth1p are very similar proteins (61% sequence identity) that have related but distinct functions in glucose signaling and control of SUC2 and HXT expression (![]()
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| DISCUSSION |
|---|
Previous studies have implicated Std1p in the Snf1 kinase glucose signaling pathway. In multicopy, the STD1 gene both restored SUC2 expression in a snf4
mutant, which is deficient in Snf1 kinase activity, and relieved glucose repression of SUC2 in the wild type. Std1p and Snf1p interacted physically in two-hybrid and biochemical assays, suggesting that Std1p directly affects Snf1 function. Here we present evidence that Std1p stimulates Snf1 kinase activity by a mechanism involving an interaction with the catalytic domain that is antagonistic to the autoinhibitory interaction of the Snf1p regulatory and catalytic domains (Fig 6).
|
We first showed that Std1p interacts with the catalytic domain of Snf1p, independent of its catalytic activity. We also found that Std1p did not interact with Snf1-T210A, in which the catalytic domain is always inhibited by the regulatory domain, suggesting that the interactions of the Snf1p catalytic domain with its regulatory domain and with Std1p are mutually exclusive (Fig 6). These findings further suggest that Std1p promotes an active, uninhibited conformation of the kinase complex by binding to the catalytic domain. Several other assays supported the view that Std1p overexpression promotes an active conformation. In glucose-grown cells, overexpression of Std1p increased the two-hybrid interaction of Snf1p and Snf4p, which reflects the open conformation in which Snf4p binds the regulatory domain. Assays of Snf1 kinase activity in vitro and assays of the ability of LexA-Snf1 to stimulate reporter transcription in vivo both indicated that overexpression of Std1p elevates Snf1 kinase activity. Previous evidence that overexpression of Std1p relieves glucose repression of SUC2 (![]()
The present findings are consistent with the isolation of STD1 as a multicopy suppressor of snf4
(![]()
exacerbates the leaky snf4
mutant phenotype observed at 23°, further reducing invertase activity 20-fold (![]()
What is the role of Std1p when it is expressed from its chromosomal locus? Because Std1p is not a stoichiometric component of the Snf1 kinase, it seems likely that Std1p promotes the establishment of an active conformation, while Snf4p has the primary role in maintenance (Fig 6). However, it remains possible that Std1p is stoichiometrically associated with certain subpopulations of the Snf1 kinase.
Genetic studies on the interactions of Std1p with glucose sensors are in accord with our findings (![]()
![]()
The regulatory effects of Std1p in response to glucose signals are complex because Std1p not only modulates Snf1 kinase activity but also regulates the expression of hexose transporters (![]()
![]()
![]()
mutant on galactose and glycerol, whereas the std1
mth1
double mutation impairs growth on these carbon sources (![]()
The interaction of Std1p with Snf1 described here represents one of several mechanisms that contribute to the regulation of Snf1 kinase function. The kinase activity is regulated by autoinhibition (![]()
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![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
mth1
double mutant in some Snf1-dependent processes indicate that Std1p does not have an essential regulatory role, it is important to note that the Snf1 kinase is a central player in very complex responses to nutrient stress. Regulatory mechanisms that are not essential under some growth conditions may be crucial under other conditions or during transitions to new conditions.
Finally, Std1p has been shown to interact not only with Snf1p but also with proteins as diverse as TBP and the glucose sensors Snf3p and Rgt2p. Genetic evidence connects Snf1p to TBP (![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Rong Jiang for providing plasmids. This work was supported by Public Health Service grant GM-47259 from the National Institutes of Health to M.C.
Manuscript received September 11, 2002; Accepted for publication November 5, 2002.
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