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Copyright © 2006 by the Genetics Society of America Genomewide Screen Reveals a Wide Regulatory Network for Di/Tripeptide Utilization in Saccharomyces cerevisiae *Department of Microbiology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996-0845 and †Department of Chemistry and Macromolecular Assemblies Institute, Graduate School and University Center, College of Staten Island, CUNY, New York, New York 10314 1Corresponding author: Department of Microbiology, University of Tennessee, M409 Walters Bldg., Knoxville, TN 37996-0845. E-mail: jbecker/at/utk.edu Communicating editor: M. Hampsey Received November 2, 2005; Accepted December 2, 2005. This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.Abstract Small peptides of two to six residues serve as important sources of amino acids and nitrogen required for growth by a variety of organisms. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the membrane transport protein Ptr2p, encoded by PTR2, mediates the uptake of di/tripeptides. To identify genes involved in regulation of dipeptide utilization, we performed a systematic, functional examination of this process in a haploid, nonessential, single-gene deletion mutant library. We have identified 103 candidate genes: 57 genes whose deletion decreased dipeptide utilization and 46 genes whose deletion enhanced dipeptide utilization. On the basis of Ptr2p-GFP expression studies, together with PTR2 expression analysis and dipeptide uptake assays, 42 genes were ascribed to the regulation of PTR2 expression, 37 genes were involved in Ptr2p localization, and 24 genes did not apparently affect Ptr2p-GFP expression or localization. The 103 genes regulating dipeptide utilization were distributed among most of the Gene Ontology functional categories, indicating a very wide regulatory network involved in transport and utilization of dipeptides in yeast. It is anticipated that further characterization of how these genes affect peptide utilization should add new insights into the global mechanisms of regulation of transport systems in general and peptide utilization in particular. PEPTIDES can serve as a major nutritional source of amino acids and nitrogen for microbial cell growth and for human nutrition as well (Pritchard and Coolbear 1993; Daniel 2004). Peptides are generated by the action of proteases and peptidases in environments where microbes reside (Gonzales and Robert-Baudouy 1996; Daniel 2004). All cellular organisms from bacteria to fungi, plants, and mammals are capable of taking up small peptides (two to six amino acids) through a system mediated by cytoplasmic membrane transporters specific for peptides (Hauser et al. 2001). In mammalian systems, two major peptide transporters, PepT1 and PepT2, have been found in the intestine and kidney, respectively (Fei et al. 1994; Liu et al. 1995). The PepT1 transporter provides the means for absorption of nutritional peptides and peptidomimetic drugs, such as β-lactam antibiotics, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, renin inhibitors, and antivirals. The substrate specificity of these transporters has provided an impetus to many pharmaceutical companies to develop peptide transporters as drug delivery systems (Lee 2000; Herrera-Ruiz and Knipp 2003). Two peptide transport systems have been characterized in the model eukaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae: the peptide transport (PTR) system transports di/tripeptides (Steiner et al. 1995) and the oligopeptide transport (OPT) system highly favors transport of peptides of four to five amino acid residues and glutathione (Lubkowitz et al. 1997; Miyake et al. 2002). While PTR family members are present in all cells studied to date and are in the same family as the mammalian transporters PepT1 and PepT2, OPT family members have been found only in plants and fungi (Hauser et al. 2001). Both the PTR and OPT transport systems are dependent on the proton-motive force, are predicted to have 12 transmembrane domains, and have specific signature sequences distinguishing them from one another and from all other proteins in the database (Hauser et al. 2001). Yet the amino acid sequence of the PTR and OPT members places them in different, unrelated families of transport proteins with presumably totally separate evolutionary origins. The only S. cerevisiae member of the PTR system is Ptr2p, encoded by the PTR2 gene. Di/Tripeptide utilization is regulated by a number of means including PTR2 transcriptional regulation. In early studies predating the cloning of PTR2, peptide utilization was shown to be upregulated by growing cells on organic nitrogen sources such as allantoin, isoleucine, or proline, defined as poor nitrogen sources in comparison to the rich nitrogen source ammonium sulfate (Island et al. 1991). Peptide utilization was also stimulated markedly by addition of micromolar amounts of certain amino acids, most notably leucine and tryptophan, to the growth medium (Island et al. 1987; Baetz et al. 2004). These environmental conditions were later shown to upregulate the expression of PTR2 (Perry et al. 1994). Although nitrogen source apparently regulates PTR2 expression via nitrogen catabolite repression (Marzluf 1997), amino acids regulate PTR2 expression via the Ssy1p-Ptr3p-Ssy5p (SPS) signal transduction pathway (Barnes et al. 1998; Forsberg and Ljungdahl 2001b; Forsberg et al. 2001a,b). In the SPS complex, Ssy1p is a transmembrane receptor that senses extracellular amino acids. Ptr3p and Ssy5p interact with the cytoplasmically located N terminus of Ssy1p (Forsberg and Ljungdahl 2001a; Poulsen et al. 2005). Two related transcription factors, Stp1p and Stp2p, are downstream of the SPS complex and regulate the expression of PTR2 and branched-chain amino acid permeases (de Boer et al. 2000). Stp1p and Stp2p are synthesized in an inactive form, and the activation of Stp1p and Stp2p depends on the endoproteolytic processing of their N-terminal domain mediated by Ptr3p and Ssy5p. The truncated forms of Stp1p and Stp2p are translocated into the nucleus to upregulate expression of downstream genes including PTR2 (Andreasson and Ljungdahl 2002, 2004). In addition to the SPS complex regulation, PTR2 expression is positively regulated by the import of di/tripeptides with basic (Arg, His, or Lys) and bulky (Ile, Leu, Phe, Trp, or Tyr) N-terminal residues that bind to Ubr1p to allosterically activate Ubr1p-mediated degradation of the PTR2 repressor Cup9p (Byrd et al. 1998; Turner et al. 2000; Du et al. 2002). Relief of Cup9p repression of PTR2 results in enhanced PTR2 expression. In a cup9 null mutant strain, PTR2 is overexpressed, resulting in a marked increase in dipeptide uptake (Byrd et al. 1998). Cup9p is degraded by Ptr1p through the ubiquitinylation pathway. In this pathway, Ptr1p acts as a scaffolding protein or ubiquitin ligase (E3) for two other proteins, Ubc2p and Ubc4p, which serve as ubiquitin-conjugating (E2) enzymes in the Cup9p degradation process (Xie and Varshavsky 1999). Deletion of PTR1 results in the stabilization of Cup9p, lack of expression of PTR2, and a null peptide-uptake phenotype (Island et al. 1991; Turner et al. 2000; Du et al. 2002). Other transcription factors, such as Dal81p/Uga35p, have also been reported to be involved in PTR2 expression, in ways apparently different from their involvement in the SPS or Cup9p pathways (Iraqui et al. 1999). Obviously, the systems regulating PTR2 expression are numerous and complex, and there has not been a systematic study to uncover other proteins involved in the regulation of peptide utilization. Systematic screening of yeast deletion mutant collections has been successfully applied in identifying genes related to drug resistance (Page et al. 2003; Aouida et al. 2004; Baetz et al. 2004), human disease (Steinmetz et al. 2002), telomere function (Askree et al. 2004), centromeric cohesion (Marston et al. 2004), vacuolar protein sorting (Bonangelino et al. 2002), and other biological processes (Scherens and Goffeau 2004). To identify other gene products involved in the regulation of peptide utilization in yeast, we conducted a genomewide screen using the haploid, nonessential, single-gene deletion strain library. We have identified a total of 103 open reading frames (ORFs), accounting for ~2% of the nonessential deletion mutants as being involved in causing increased or decreased utilization of peptides for growth. We monitored Ptr2p-GFP expression in the identified 103 deletion mutant strains, and genes involved in multiple cellular functions including transcriptional regulation and membrane trafficking were revealed as being involved in dipeptide utilization. The data generated provide a global view of molecular components regulating dipeptide utilization by S. cerevisiae. MATERIALS AND METHODS Strains, media, and mutant library growth assay screen: A yeast haploid, nonessential, single-gene deletion mutant strain library was purchased from Open Biosystems (Huntsville, AL), containing 4827 deletion strains, 4750 in the BY4742 (MATα his3Δ1 leu2Δ0 lys2Δ0 ura3Δ0) background and 77 strains in the BY4739 (MATα leu2Δ0 lys2Δ0 ura3Δ0) strain background. The list of strains contained in the library is available at the company's website (http://openbiosystems.com/yeast_knock_outs.php). The deletion mutants were arrayed in 96-well microtiter plates kept at −80° in YPD broth containing G418 and glycerol (1% yeast extract, 2% peptone, 2% dextrose, 200 μg/ml G418, and 15% glycerol). After thawing, the deletion mutants were inoculated into minimal medium supplemented with amino acids to satisfy the auxotrophic requirements, using a 96-well plate replicator. The minimal medium used in this study is referred to as MM + HLKU and contained (per liter) 20 g dextrose, 1.7 g yeast nitrogen base (Difco, Detroit) without (NH4)2SO4 and amino acids, 1 g allantoin as nitrogen source, supplemented with 20 μg/ml His (H), 30 μg/ml Leu (L), 30 μg/ml Lys (K), and 20 μg/ml Ura (U). The plates were incubated at 30° for 2 days, and then the liquid medium growth assay was performed as follows. Five microliters from each well were inoculated into 200 μl of three different liquid media: (1) MM + HLKU medium as described above, (2) MM + His–Leu (H–L)HKU medium, or (3) MM + (H–L)HKU + Trp medium. The MM + (H–L)HKU and MM + (H–L)HKU + Trp media contained 80 μm His–Leu dipeptide in place of leucine with all other components identical to the MM + HLKU medium, except that tryptophan (30 μg/ml) was added to the MM + (H–L)HKU + Trp medium. The purpose of the tryptophan addition was to induce PTR2 expression as shown in previous studies (Island et al. 1987). The efficiency of the utilization of His–Leu was reflected in cell growth. The minicultures in the microtiter plates were grown at 30° with shaking at 200 rpm. The OD620 was measured at incubation times of 0, 12, 24, 48, and 72 hr with a 96-well plate reader (Multiskan MCC/340; Labsystems, Helsinki). In some circumstances, growth at incubation times of 36, 60, 84, and 96 hr was also recorded. The ptr2 deletion mutant was not able to grow in the His–Leu-supplemented medium, although its growth in the medium MM + HKLU was excellent. Strains either defective in peptide utilization (ptr1 deletion) or overexpressing PTR2 (cup9 deletion) were inoculated into wells of each plate as controls showing defective or enhanced dipeptide utilization, respectively. In this manner, deletion strains were identified that grew more, or less, efficiently than wild type in MM + (H–L)HKU or MM + (H–L)HKU + Trp medium. Solid medium growth assay: Using the same principle as that employed in the liquid medium growth assay, a solid medium growth assay was used to determine whether the candidate gene deletion strains obtained from the liquid medium growth screen could utilize dipeptide on solid medium as their substrate to satisfy auxotrophic requirements. The deletion mutant candidates from the screen, wild-type BY4742, cup9, and ptr1 deletion mutants were grown overnight in MM + HLKU liquid medium at 30° while shaking at 200 rpm. Cells were harvested by centrifugation and washed three times with sterile, distilled water. Cells were then counted by hemacytometer and adjusted to the cell number of 5 × 106/ml. Five microliters of a suspension containing 2.5 × 104 and 2.5 × 103 yeast cells were spotted onto agar plates containing one of three different media: (1) MM + HLKU, (2) MM + (H–L)HKU, or (3) MM + (H–L)HKU + Trp. The plates were incubated at 30°, and growth was recorded after 2 days. A score was given to the growth of each strain compared to the growth of wild-type, cup9, and ptr1 deletion mutant strains. Toxic halo assays and osmotic sensitivity assay: For the toxic dipeptide halo assay, the sensitivity of deletion mutants to the toxic dipeptide Ala–Ethionine (Eth) was measured as previously described (Island et al. 1987). Eth is an analog of methionine, and utilization of Eth causes cell death. This assay is more sensitive than the previously described dipeptide growth assays. Yeast cells having a functional dipeptide transport system will take up the toxic dipeptide and die (indicated by a clear halo of growth inhibition on plates spotted with ethioninyl-containing peptides). Cells with a defective dipeptide uptake system will not take up the dipeptide efficiently and will survive (as indicated by a small halo or no halo). Cells were grown overnight in MM + HLKU medium and then harvested and washed three times with sterile, distilled water. Yeast cells were counted and adjusted to the cell number of 5 × 106/ml. One milliliter of the cell suspension was added to 0.8% noble agar (3 ml) and plated onto solid MM + HLKU medium. Two 6-mm sterile paper disks containing either 0.2 or 0.1 μmol of Ala–Eth were placed on the lawn of cells. The halo size was measured after 2 days of incubation at 30°. The halo size formed by each deletion mutant was compared to the halo size of the wild-type strain by dividing the halo size of the mutant by the halo size of the wild-type strain and multiplied by 100 to get a percentage. A strain that gave a >100% value was considered to be deleted for a gene that was involved in downregulation of peptide utilization, whereas a strain deleted for a gene involved in upregulation would give a <100% value in this test. For the canavanine toxicity assay, the procedure was the same as that for the toxic dipeptide halo assay. Two 6-mm sterile paper disks containing 1 μg of canavanine were placed on the lawn of cells. The size of halo was measured and the image was taken after 2 days incubation at 30°. For the osmotic sensitivity assay, the wild-type and deletion mutant strains were grown overnight in MM + HLKU medium and then harvested and washed three times with sterile, distilled water. Yeast cells were counted and adjusted to the cell number of 5 × 106/ml, and then cells were further diluted to 5 × 105/ml, 5 × 104/ml, and 5 × 103/ml. Ten microliters of each cell suspension were spotted into MM + HLKU media containing 0 m, 0.4 m, and 1.0 m NaCl. Uptake assays: The strains were grown overnight in MM + HLKU and then subcultured into a fresh medium. Cells were harvested in log phase, washed with 2% glucose, and adjusted to a final concentration to 2 × 108 cells/ml. The uptake assay was initiated by combining equal volumes of prewarmed (30°) cells and uptake assay mixture [2% glucose, 20 mm sodium citrate/potassium phosphate, pH 5.5, 320 μm Leu–Leu (Sigma, St. Louis), and 2 μCi/ml [3H]Leu–Leu (Island et al. 1987)]. After 10 min, portions (100 μl) were removed onto a membrane filter and washed four times by vacuum filtration with 1 ml ice-cold water. The radioactivity retained on the filter was determined by liquid scintillation spectrometry, and results were reported as nmol Leu–Leu uptake/1 × 109 cells/10 min. The accumulation of [3H]Leu–Leu in the ptr2 strain was subtracted from that of the tested strains, and the percentage of the accumulation of [3H]Leu–Leu in each deletion mutant vs. that in the wild type was calculated. Reporter gene assay: The centromeric plasmid pRD1, which contained a selectable URA3 marker and the lacZ gene under the control of the PTR2 promoter, was transformed into the tested deletion mutant strains. The reporter gene assay was performed using a protocol adapted from Hoffman (Hoffman et al. 2002). The strains were grown overnight in MM + HLK and subcultured into a fresh medium. Cells were harvested in log phase, washed with sterile water, and adjusted to a final concentration to 1 × 108 cells/ml. Cell suspension (100 μl) was added to a well of a 96-well plate, and then 20 μl fluorescein di-β-d-galactopyranoside (FDG) solution was added. The FDG solution was prepared by mixing solution 1 (0.1 mm FDG diluted in 25 mm PIPES, pH 7.2) and solution 2 (5% Triton X-100 diluted in 250 mm PIPES, pH 7.2) in equal amounts just prior to use. The plate was incubated at 37° for 1.5 hr and then read with a fluorescence multiwell plate reader (Wallac Victor2, 1420 multilabel counter; Perkin-Elmer Life and Analytical Sciences, Wellesley, MA), using 485 and 530 nm as excitation and emission wavelengths, respectively. Classification of the obtained genes: The classification of the 103 genes identified through this screen was based on the Gene Ontology (GO) annotation found in the Saccharomyces Genome Database (SGD) (http://db.yeastgenome.org/cgi-bin/GO/goTermMapper) (Christie et al. 2004), where 34 functional categories of biological process were given. Among the 103 genes, some genes fell into several categories due to their multiple known functions. The detailed gene function could also be referenced from the Yeast Proteome Database (YPD) (https://proteome.incyte.com/control/tools/proteome) (Hodges et al. 1999). Northern analysis of PTR2 mRNA in deletion mutant strains: Approximately 3 × 108 cells of select candidate deletion mutant strains were harvested after overnight growth in MM + HLKU medium. Yeast total RNA was isolated using an extraction kit (RiboPure-Yeast; Ambion, Austin, TX). Total RNA was quantified by monitoring absorbance at 260 nm, and 20 μg was loaded per lane into a formaldehyde-reducing gel. Gels were run in buffer containing MOPS (pH 7.0) for 5 hr at 75 V and then transferred by capillary action onto a nylon hybridization membrane in 20× SSC. Total RNA was UV crosslinked to the membrane with a Stratalinker UV source. The blot was prehybridized at 65° in Church buffer (7% SDS, 1% BSA, 1 mm EDTA, and 250 mm Na2HPO4, pH 7.2) for 2 hr and hybridized overnight in the same buffer containing radioactive probes at 65°. Radioactive probes were prepared as follows. A 1.7-kb fragment of PTR2 was obtained by PCR amplification using the primers PTR2-F (Northern) and PTR2-R (Northern), and a 0.92-kb fragment of ACT1 was obtained by PCR amplification using the primers ACT1-F (Northern) and ACT1-R (Northern) (primer sequences are represented in supplemental Table S1 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/). DNA fragments were labeled with [α-32P]dATP by random-primed probe synthesis. Blots were rinsed with posthybridization buffer (0.1× SSC, 0.1% SDS) at 65°, and the RNA images were developed with a Storm 840 phosphoimager (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA). The expression of PTR2 in each mutant was analyzed at least twice in separate experiments, with similar expression found in each experiment. The quantification of PTR2 and ACT1 mRNA was performed using the software ImageQuant 5.0 (GE Healthcare Technologies, Waukesha, WI). Real-time RT–PCR: Approximately 3 × 108 cells of the tested deletion mutant strains were harvested after overnight growth in MM + HLKU medium. Yeast total RNA was isolated using the RiboPure-Yeast extraction kit (Ambion) and then treated with the TURBO DNA-free kit (Ambion) to eliminate the genomic DNA contamination. The amount of total RNA was quantified by monitoring absorbance at 260 nm. To check that the genomic DNA had been eliminated, the obtained total RNA was used for the template to PCR amplify the target genes, and no PCR product was obtained. cDNA was synthesized using M-MLV RT (400 units reverse transcriptase; Invitrogen, San Diego) in a reaction mixture containing 1 μg Oligo(dT), 1 mm deooxynucleoside triphosphates, 14 units anti-RNase, and 1 μg of total RNA at 42° for 45 min, and the reaction was stopped after 5 min by incubation at 72°. Real-time PCR analysis was performed in the DNA Engine Opticon (MJ Research, Boston, MA). The QuantiTect SYBR Green PCR kit (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA) and the primers (the sequences are presented in supplemental Table S1 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/) resulting in ~100 bp amplicon were applied in the PCR reaction. The reaction contained 12.5 μl of 2× qPCR reaction mix and 15 pmol of primers and was run with a cycle of 50° for 2 min, 95° for 15 min, followed by 40 cycles of 95° for 15 sec, 54° for 30 sec, and 72° for 15 sec. A standard curve for each primer set was performed with 1, 1:10, 1:100, 1:1000, 1:10,000, and 1:100,000 dilutions of the wild-type cDNA. The CT-value, the cycle when sample fluorescence exceeds a chosen threshold above background fluorescence, was determined using the software program. The copy number of PTR2, PMA1, and ACT1 genes in each deletion mutant strain was calculated on the basis of the standard curve. The ratio of the fold change of target genes (PTR2 and PMA1) vs. the fold change of the internal control gene (ACT1) in the tested mutant strains was calculated to show upregulation or downregulation. The ratio of the fold change in the wild type was standardized as 1.0. Ptr2p localization in deletion mutant strains: To trace the localization of Ptr2p, a Ptr2p-GFP construct was created as follows. The primers PTR2-FLAG-GFP-F and PTR2-Flag-GFP-R (see supplemental Table S1 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/ for the sequence) were used to PCR amplify two tandem copies of the GFP gene using pKW430 [a gift of Mary Miller, Rhodes College, Memphis, TN (Stade et al. 1997)] as the template. The amplified PCR product (1.5 kb) had two copies of GFP sequence with 40 bp of flanking sequence homologous to pMS2, which contained PTR2 with its endogenous promoter and terminator sequences and both FLAG and His tags located at the C terminus. The plasmid was linearized with AgeI at a unique restriction site located between the FLAG and His tags. The centromeric plasmid pMS4, containing Ptr2p-FLAG-GFP2-His6 and the selectable marker URA3, was created by homologous recombination. To test the localization of Ptr2p-GFP in different yeast strains, the pMS4 construct was transformed into each deletion mutant of interest and transformants were selected by growth in the absence of uracil. Yeast strains carrying pMS4 were pregrown in MM + HLK overnight and then inoculated into fresh MM + HLK at an initial cell concentration of 2 × 106 cells/ml. Cells were concentrated by centrifugation and observed at 10 hr after inoculation by fluorescence microscopy using a 470- to 490-nm excitation wavelength and 515-nm emission filter fitted to an Olympus (Lake Success, NY) microscope. Images were taken with a MicroFire camera (model S99809; Olympus). All mutants were in the log phase at the 10-hr time point as ascertained by the high proportion of cells with buds and the low density of cells under the experimental conditions used. To visualize the amount of GFP expression, each image was captured with the same exposure time. Significantly higher and lower GFP signals could be distinguished from the captured images. For those images with higher GFP signal, the images were taken with a decreased exposure time to be visualized clearly. RESULTS Primary screening of deletion mutants to identify strains demonstrating increased or decreased dipeptide utilization: To identify genes involved in dipeptide utilization, we screened a library of 4826 haploid, single-gene deletion strains for mutants with an altered dipeptide utilization profile. The leucine auxotrophic marker in the BY4742 strain background (MATα his3Δ1 leu2Δ0 lys2Δ0 ura3Δ0) was used to monitor how well each strain was able to utilize the dipeptide His–Leu. Under the conditions of the screen, cells could grow only if they were able to take up the dipeptide His–Leu from the medium and release leucine from the peptide intracellularly. Numerous previous studies have shown that there is no extracellular peptidase or protease in S. cerevisiae able to catalyze the hydrolysis of dipeptides under the growth conditions used. In this screening, any mutant strain demonstrating either enhanced or decreased growth was considered to have a deletion in a gene involved in dipeptide utilization. Since Ptr2p is the only dipeptide transporter expressed in this yeast under the conditions used for the screen, we expected that genes related to the regulation of PTR2 expression or Ptr2p function would comprise the list of candidates. The yeast deletion mutant library was generated by the Saccharomyces Genome Deletion Project, which involved several laboratories (Winzeler et al. 1999). Only nonessential genes are represented in this deletion mutant collection. In the primary screening, yeast deletion mutants were grown in a poor nitrogen medium with allantoin as the nitrogen source. These conditions are known to partially upregulate PTR2 expression (Island et al. 1991). All deletion mutant strains not capable of growing in allantoin as the sole nitrogen source were necessarily excluded from this study. One hundred nine strains of the haploid collection were identified in this category. For a full list of the 109 strains see supplemental Table S2 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/. The rest of the deletion series, including strains known to be deficient (ptr1) and hyperactive (cup9) for dipeptide utilization, grew similarly in the MM + HLKU medium. A screen was performed of the mutant collection in medium [MM + (H–L)HKU + Trp] containing His–Leu as the only leucine source. Tryptophan upregulates PTR2 expression via the SPS system over the enhancement induced by growth on MM alone, thus providing the maximal dipeptide utilization phenotype (Island et al. 1987; Forsberg and Ljungdahl 2001b). The screen was also performed without tryptophan addition with identical results observed (data not shown). Two hundred seventy-eight deletion mutants were obtained from the primary screening that showed either enhanced dipeptide utilization (the deleted genes are “negative regulator genes”) or decreased dipeptide utilization (the deleted genes are “positive regulator genes”). As controls for comparison of strains that show increased or decreased dipeptide utilization, cup9 and ptr1 mutants were used. Cup9p is a repressor of PTR2 transcriptional expression; the cup9 deletion mutant strain has a higher expression level of PTR2 in comparison to that of the wild type (Byrd et al. 1998); therefore the hyperactive strain (cup9) grew better than wild type on dipeptide (Figure 1A
Growth patterns of deletion mutant strains hal9, kem1, npr1, srn2, ssn3, ubr2, vps8, and ybt1 were similar to that of the cup9 deletion mutant in that they had a shorter lag phase and a higher growth rate compared to the wild type (Figure 1A Verification of candidate genes—solid media growth assay and toxic dipeptide halo assay: The candidate mutants were further tested in a solid medium growth assay and a toxic dipeptide halo assay. The deletion mutant strains were grown on solid medium plates containing MM + HLKU, MM + (H–L)HKU, or MM + (H–L)HKU + Trp. Eighteen representative deletion mutant strains with enhanced or decreased dipeptide utilization are shown in Figure 2
The mutants identified in the initial screen were also subjected to a toxic dipeptide assay for further verification of the peptide transport phenotype. In this assay, cells were grown on MM + HLKU and tested for their sensitivity to Ala–Eth. The halo size of each deletion mutant strain was measured and compared to that of wild type. A larger halo indicated that the deletion mutant strain was more sensitive to Ala–Eth toxic dipeptide than the wild type, while a smaller halo indicated less sensitivity. As expected, cup9 developed a larger halo than that of wild type and ptr1 was not sensitive to the toxic dipeptide. Similar to cup9, deletion strains hal9, kem1, npr1, srn2, ssn3, ubr2, vps8, and ybt1 developed a larger halo than that of wild type (Table 1), indicating that the deleted genes negatively regulated dipeptide utilization. Conversely, similar to ptr1, deletion strains bud32, dal81, gcv3, lpd1, reg1, rpn4, ubc2, and ubp14 were not sensitive to toxic dipeptide (Table 2), indicating that the deleted genes positively regulated dipeptide utilization.
Of the 278 strains identified in the initial liquid growth screen, 103 strains showed increased or decreased peptide utilization in all three assays: liquid and solid media growth and the toxic dipeptide halo assay [supplemental Tables S3 and S4 (http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/) listed in order of biological process according to Gene Ontology annotation]. These 103 genes were considered to be the set of genes involved as either negative or positive regulators of peptide utilization as determined by the three experimental tests. As expected, 5 genes (PTR1, CUP9, UBC2, DAL81/UGA35, and STP2) previously known to be involved in dipeptide utilization were identified among the 103 genes, which validated the utility of the screening method. Three other genes (SSY1, PTR3, and SSY5), known to affect dipeptide utilization via the regulation of PTR2 mRNA expression, were not found in the screen since they are not included in the deletion mutant library. The number of deletion mutant strains found by our methods to modulate dipeptide utilization accounted for ~2% of the entire collection. Of the 46 genes whose deletion mutant strains enhanced dipeptide utilization (supplemental Table S3), 20 encoded proteins with more than a 30% protein sequence identity to a human protein (supplemental Table S3, footnote a). Additionally, of the 57 genes whose deletion mutant strain decreased dipeptide utilization (supplemental Table S4), 33 encoded proteins with more than a 30% sequence identity to a human protein (supplemental Table S4, footnote a). According to GO annotation in the SGD, the 103 genes covered 29 of the 34 given Biological Processes GO categories. The categories of each gene are indicated in supplemental Tables S3 and S4. Ptr2p-GFP expression and localization in the identified deletion strains: To further explore the impact of the identified 103 genes on dipeptide utilization, we measured Ptr2p expression and localization using a Ptr2p-GFP chimera. This construct (pMS4), which encoded Ptr2p-GFP under the control of its native promoter, was transformed into the 103 deletion strains, and Ptr2p-GFP in log phase cells was observed by fluorescence microscopy. The addition of the GFP tag did not affect the function of Ptr2p as demonstrated by halo and uptake assays (data not shown). Ptr2p-GFP was primarily localized to the plasma membrane in wild-type log-phase cells (Figure 3
Ptr2p-GFP expression and localization in deletion strains with increased dipeptide utilization: The Ptr2p-GFP expression signal and localization in 46 deletion strains with increased dipeptide utilization are shown in supplemental Figure S1 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/ (9 deletion strains and wild type are shown in Figure 3 Strains with enhanced Ptr2p-GFP expression signal: A higher level of Ptr2p-GFP expression signal in the plasma membrane was observed in the cup9 deletion strain as compared to the wild type (Figure 3 Strains with altered Ptr2p-GFP localization: Fourteen deletion strains with increased dipeptide utilization showed altered localization of Ptr2p-GFP (Table 3 and supplemental Figure S1 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/). An example of three deletion mutants, npr1, srn2, and vps8 is shown in Figure 3 To further characterize the ESCRT protein complexes involved in Ptr2p endocytotic degradation, deletion mutant strains of other components of the ESCRT protein complexes (vps2, vps20, vps22, vps23, vps24, vps25, and vps28) were also transformed with the pMS4 construct. The localization of Ptr2p-GFP in these strains was similar to that in snf7, srn2, and vps36 strains (supplemental Figure S2 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/). Additionally, vps2, vps20, vps22, vps23, vps24, vps25, and vps28 strains were more sensitive to toxic dipeptide as compared to the wild type (supplemental Table S5 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/), confirming the role of the ESCRT protein complex in dipeptide utilization. The deletion strain npr1 showed an accumulation of Ptr2p-GFP signal in both endosomal vesicles and the vacuole in addition to the plasma membrane localization (Figure 3 Strains with no apparent effect on Ptr2p-GFP expression or localization: The deletion strain ybt1 showed no apparent difference in the expression level of Ptr2p-GFP signal in the cytoplasmic membrane (Figure 3 Ptr2p-GFP expression and localization in deletion strains with decreased dipeptide utilization: The expression level of Ptr2p-GFP signal and localization of 9 representative strains are shown in Figure 4
Gene deletion enhanced the expression level of Ptr2p-GFP signal: The deletion strains asm4, ydr015c, and ydr290w showed an enhanced expression level of Ptr2p-GFP at the cytoplasmic membrane and the vacuole (supplemental Figure S4 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/). These strains showed a decreased sensitivity to toxic dipeptide, however, with no growth change on dipeptide (supplemental Table S4 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/). In the asm4 strain, a fuzzy halo was observed in the toxic dipeptide halo assay, indicating a transient growth inhibition. ASM4 encodes a component of the karyopherin docking complex of the nuclear pore (Marelli et al. 1998), indicating that some cellular protein involved in ethionine toxicity requires Asm4p for its full expression. Strains with altered Ptr2p-GFP localization: Compared to the wild type, deletion strains bud32 and reg1 showed higher expression level of Ptr2p-GFP signal at the vacuole and less expression in the plasma membrane (reg1) or no visible plasma membrane expression (bud32) (Figure 4 Strains with no apparent effect on the expression or localization of Ptr2p-GFP: No apparent change in the expression or localization of Ptr2p-GFP was observed in the lpd1 deletion strain (Figure 4 Strains with decreased expression of Ptr2p-GFP: The expression level of Ptr2p-GFP signal was lower in the ptr1, dal81, rpn4, ubc2, and ubp14 deletion strain as compared to that in the wild type (Figure 4 Transcriptional regulation of PTR2: To explore whether strains with enhanced or reduced expression level of Ptr2p-GFP showed a change in the transcriptional regulation of PTR2, the fold change of PTR2 mRNA compared to that of the wild type was measured by real-time reverse transcription PCR in the 18 representative deletion strains. In control experiments, PTR2 mRNA expression level in the cup9 strain was upregulated more than nine times that of the wild type (Table 4). This result also agreed with the increased PTR2 mRNA level in Northern analysis and lacZ activity as compared to the wild type (data not shown). The increase in PTR2 mRNA expression in the cup9 strain is consistent with the increased expression level of Ptr2p-GFP signal (Figure 3
PTR2 mRNA expression level in the ptr1 strain was only 7% that of the wild type (Table 4) in accordance with the known requirement of Ptr1p for PTR2 transcription (Byrd et al. 1998; Turner et al. 2000). This result also agreed with the decreased PTR2 mRNA level in Northern analysis and lacZ activity as compared to that in the wild type (data not shown). The decrease in PTR2 mRNA expression in the ptr1 strain is consistent with the decreased expression level of Ptr2p-GFP signal (Figure 4 Dipeptide uptake capability: To explore whether altered dipeptide utilization was correlated directly to flux of dipeptide, the accumulation of [3H]Leu–Leu dipeptide was measured in the 18 representative strains (Figure 5
The accumulation of [3H]Leu–Leu in the ptr1 strain was lower than that in the wild type. The reduced accumulation of dipeptide was consistent with the decreased expression level of PTR2 mRNA and Ptr2p-GFP in the ptr1 strain. Similar to that in the ptr1 strain, the accumulation of [3H]Leu–Leu was lower in the bud32, dal81, lpd1, reg1, rpn4, ubc2, and ubp14 strains as compared to that in the wild type (Figure 5 Effects of gene deletions on osmotic and canavanine sensitivity and PMA1 expression: To determine whether gene deletions also affected general membrane properties, additional assays were performed. Osmotic sensitivity, toxicity of canavanine, and the expression level of PMA1 encoding a proton transporter localized in the cytoplasmic membrane were examined. NaCl at 1.0 m inhibits the growth of wild-type S. cerevisiae by causing osmotic destabilization of the cell membrane (Hohmann 2002). NaCl at 1.0 m significantly inhibited the growth of all strains on MM + HLKU plates. Fourteen deletion mutant strains, cup9, dal81, gcv3, hal9, lpd1, npr1, ptr1, reg1, rpn4, ssn3, ubc2, ubp14, ubr2, and ybt1, showed similar effects to NaCl as the wild type (Tables 1 and 2 and supplemental Figure S4 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/), suggesting that the deletion of those genes did not change the osmotic sensitivity of the deletion mutant strains. In contrast, four deletion mutant strains, bud32, kem1, srn2, and vps8, showed greater sensitivity to 1.0 m NaCl than the wild type (Tables 1 and 2 and supplemental Figure S4). Canavanine is transported by the arginine permease and changes in canavanine toxicity have been correlated directly to arginine permease function (Hampsey 1997). In the canavanine toxicity assay, nine deletion mutant strains, cup9, hal9, ptr1, rpn4, ssn3, ubc2, ubp14, ubr2, and ybt1, did not show significant alteration in the canavanine sensitivity as compared with that of the wild type. In contrast, six deletion mutants, dal81, gcv3, lpd1, reg1, srn2, and vps8, were more sensitive to canavanine, and three deletion mutant strains, bud32, kem1, and npr1, were less sensitive than the wild type (Tables 1 and 2 and supplemental Figure S5 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/). To examine whether the gene representative deletion mutants were also affected in the expression of other transport proteins, the expression level of PMA1 encoding a proton transporter was measured. PMA1 mRNA expression level in cup9 and ptr1 strains was similar to that of the wild type (Table 4). In contrast, PMA1 mRNA level was upregulated more than twofold in kem1, lpd1, ssn3, ubr2, vps8, and ybt1 strains and less than twofold in bud32, dal81, gcv3, hal9, npr1, reg1, rpn4, srn2, ubc2, and ubp14 strains (Table 4). Overall, these changes in expression levels of PMA1 in the various mutant strains did not correlate with the changes in expression in PTR2 except for upregulation of both genes in the ssn3 and kem1 strains. DISCUSSION We have systematically screened a haploid, single-gene, deletion mutant library and identified 103 genes involved in dipeptide utilization. To our knowledge, this is the first such screen for a membrane transport system. PTR2 expression is known to be regulated by amino acids via the SPS protein complex and by dipeptides themselves (Figure 6
The 103 genes identified in the screen cover a number of different biological processes based on the Gene Ontology annotation. It is clear from the broad range of mutants identified that genes involved in both direct and indirect regulation of peptide utilization were discovered. Such a global array of genes supports the interconnectivity of networks involved in regulating biological processes (Lee et al. 2002; Chen et al. 2003), but such a heterogeneous collection of interacting genes has not been identified previously as specifically regulating membrane transport systems. Genes that regulate PTR2 transcription: In this study we have considerably expanded the identification of genes involved in PTR2 transcriptional regulation. The deletion of these genes results in the alteration of dipeptide utilization. First, we have shown that dipeptide utilization can be affected by gene products involved in the modification of the nucleosome, namely Arp5p, Arp8p, Ies6p, and Taf14p. These proteins belong to the components of the chromatin remodeling INO80 protein complex that carries ATPase activity, DNA binding, and nucleosome mobilization (Sanders et al. 2002) and that preferentially interacts with histones H3 and H4 (Shen et al. 2003). Another histone- modification-related gene product, Eaf3p, was also identified in our screen. Eaf3p is a component of the NuA4 histone acetyltransferase complex that maintains the acetylation of histones H3 and H4 (Reid et al. 2004). It is possible that these chromatin remodeling proteins negatively regulate PTR2 transcription via the modification of histones. A model representing the potential involvement of these proteins and others is shown (Figure 6 Second, four gene products with transcription factor activity, Cup9p, Dal81p, Stp2p, and Rpn4p were shown to regulate PTR2 expression and affected dipeptide utilization. Cup9p binds the region between −488 and −897 upstream of the PTR2 start codon (Byrd et al. 1998), while Rpn4p may bind between −610 and −603 due to the existence of the Rpn4p binding consensus sequence (5′-GGTGGAAA-3′) present at this location (Mannhaupt et al. 1999). Cup9p is a repressor of PTR2, whereas Rpn4p is a “positive regulator” as reflected in the observation that the cup9 deletion strain showed an increase in peptide utilization and the rpn4 strain has decreased peptide utilization. Subsequent to amino acid induction via the SPS system and its conversion into the active form after proteolytically processing and translocation into the nucleus (Andreasson and Ljungdahl 2002, 2004), the active form of Stp2p (truncated at the N terminus) binds to the upstream activation sequence (UAS) of the promoter region of BAP2 and BAP3 (de Boer et al. 2000; Nielsen et al. 2001). Because BAP2, BAP3, and PTR2 are simultaneously regulated in response to amino acid induction via the SPS-Stp2p system, the active form of Stp2p likely also binds to the PTR2 promoter region and regulates its transcription. Dal81p is a transcriptional activator essential for PTR2 expression under the induction by the SPS signal pathway as well (Bernard and Andre 2001). Dal81p acts synergistically with Stp1p to regulate the transcription of AGP1 in response to the amino acid induction, and the sequence 5′-CGGC-3′ of a UAS element is important for AGP1 transcriptional regulation (Abdel-Sater et al. 2004). Since the PTR2 promoter region has this consensus sequence and because Dal81p was identified as important for PTR2 transcription and dipeptide utilization in our screening, we speculate that Dal81p and Stp2p act synergistically in PTR2 transcription in a similar manner. Third, other gene products identified in this screen such as Ubr2p, Ptr1p, and Ubc2p regulate PTR2 expression by modulating the stability of Rpn4p and Cup9p (Figure 6 Fourth, we identified one other gene product (SSN3) involved in PTR2 transcription that is known to be general transcription factor, which also affected PMA1 expression. Ssn3p/Srb10p, Ssn8p/Srb11p, Ssn2p/Srb9p, and Srb8p have been identified as a cyclin-dependent serine/threonine protein kinase complex that functions as a mediator of RNA polymerase (Kornberg 2005). This complex is also involved in the glucose signaling pathway (Balciunas and Ronne 1995; Kuchin et al. 1995). Deletion of these genes leads to derepression of a wide variety of downstream genes, including GAL and SUC, which are important for galactose and raffinose metabolism, respectively (Myer and Young 1998; Kuchin et al. 2000). The deletion of SSN3 resulted in a change of PMA1 and PTR2 expression level. Finally, we identified gene products involved in PTR2 transcription by means that are not clear. For example, UBP14 was important for PTR2 expression since deletion of these genes significantly decreased PTR2 mRNA level (Table 4), and the strain carrying deletion of this gene exhibited decreased peptide utilization. Ubp14p has ubiquitin-specific protease activity (supplemental Table S4 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/). It is probably modulating PTR2 transcription via the ubiquitination pathway. In addition, the deletion of UBP14 had no effect on the expression of PMA1 or on sensitivity to NaCl and canavanine. Further experiments are needed to provide some insight into whether the gene product acts directly or indirectly to control PTR2 expression. Genes involved in PTR2 mRNA maturation: Gene products (Kem1p, Pat1p, and Thp1p) involved in post-transcriptional regulation impacting the stability and transport of PTR2 mRNA also affected dipeptide utilization (Figure 6 Genes that regulate Ptr2p trafficking: This screen revealed that dipeptide utilization is regulated by the trafficking system. Deletion of components of ESCRT-I, ESCRT-II, and ESCRT-III protein complexes showed a defect in Ptr2p-GFP trafficking from the endosome to the vacuole (Figure 6 Deletion mutants (npr1, lst4) with increased dipeptide utilization and mutants (bud32, reg1) with decreased utilization showed an accumulation of Ptr2p-GFP in vesicles. NPR1 encodes a Ser/Thr protein kinase, involved in post-translational control of Gap1p. Npr1p is required for Gap1p to be targeted to the plasma membrane, and an npr1 deletion mutant loses Gap1p function by sorting Gap1p from the Golgi into the vacuole, bypassing the plasma membrane (De Craene et al. 2001). Similarly, mutations in LST4 reduced the function of Galp1p and other amino acid permeases by the interruption of sorting of these transporters to the cell surface (Roberg et al. 1997). Our observations indicated that NPR1 and LST4 regulate Ptr2p differently from the way they regulate Gap1p. It is not clear how Lst4p and Npr1p regulate Ptr2p in a manner opposite to that of their regulation of Gap1p. Bud32p is a Ser/Thr protein kinase involved in polar bud site selection and changing the vacuolar morphology (Bonangelino et al. 2002). Reg1p is a regulatory subunit for protein phosphatase Glc7p involved in the repression of many glucose-regulated genes and vesicular trafficking (Cui et al. 2004). The involvement of Bud32p and Reg1p in dipeptide utilization reflects their roles in Ptr2p trafficking. Genes that regulate dipeptide utilization independent of Ptr2p: The alteration of dipeptide utilization also results from Ptr2p-independent metabolic processes as indicated by the observation of no apparent phenotypic change in expression or localization of Ptr2p-GFP in a number of mutants (Table 3). Mutation in genes encoding a variety of cellular metabolic processes (supplemental Figure S6 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/) (Nagarajan and Storms 1997; Schneider et al. 1997; Stoops et al. 1997), such as the conversion of pyruvate into acetyl-CoA by pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (Pdx1p, Lpd1, Pdb1p, and Lat1p), the conversion of acetyl-CoA to malonyl-CoA by Hfa1p, fatty acid synthesis by fatty acid synthase complex (Oar1p, Mct1p, and Etr1p), glycine degradation (Gcv2p, Gcv3p, and Lpd1p), and a peptidase activity (Prd1p), resulted in a decrease of dipeptide utilization (Table 3). In these mutants the impairment of the dipeptide utilization appeared to be independent of Ptr2p transport activity since Ptr2p-GFP could be observed at the plasma membrane (supplemental Figure S3 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/). The assay of [3H]Leu–Leu uptake in gcv3 strains suggested that the import of dipeptide was still maintained at a wild-type level, which showed that Ptr2p was functional (Figure 5 Deletion strains cik1, kti12, mlh1, mrp17, pho2, rim101, tif3, ybt1, and ydr417c showed no apparent effect on Ptr2p-GFP localization or expression but demonstrated increased dipeptide utilization. The utilization of dipeptide in these strains appears to involve Ptr2p-independent cellular processes as well. For example, Ybt1p belongs to the ABC transporter family, exhibiting ATP-dependent bile acid transport (Ortiz et al. 1997; Paulsen et al. 1998). As expected for an ABC transporter, the ybt1 mutant was not only more sensitive to the toxic dipeptide Ala–Eth, but also this strain was more sensitive to ethionine and Lys–Ala–Eth (data not shown). We speculate that this protein might be involved in the transport of dipeptide into the vacuole. In the deletion mutant the defect in the uptake of dipeptide into the vacuole would lead to an increase of dipeptide availability in the cytoplasm. It is also possible that the deletion of a gene might result in a derepression or change in function of other transport systems that may mediate dipeptide utilization in the mutant without alteration of PTR2 expression or Ptr2p function. We are currently working on unraveling the involvement of these metabolic genes in dipeptide utilization. Unknown genes that regulate dipeptide utilization: Fifteen unknown gene deletion mutant strains were identified in this screen, including 7 strains exhibiting increased and 8 strains showing decreased dipeptide utilization (Table 3). Deletion mutants yor322c, ynl123w, yfr044c, and ylr114c showed enhanced expression level of Ptr2p-GFP signal compared to that of wild type, and ypr174c had reduced expression of Ptr2p-GFP; these results were consistent with dipeptide utilization in these strains, suggesting that these unknown genes products are involved in the regulation of PTR2 expression. Deletion mutants ynl295w, ypl073c, yjl175w, ydr157w, and ydr433w showed accumulation of Ptr2p-GFP signal in the vesicles or the vacuole, suggesting that these unknown gene products are involved in Ptr2p trafficking and localization. Similar to the expression level of Ptr2p-GFP in the asm4 strain, enhanced Ptr2p-GFP expression was observed in the deletion mutant strains of unknown function, ydr015c and ydr290w. These two mutants, however, showed a decreased sensitivity to toxic dipeptide and no growth change on dipeptide; it is not clear how these genes regulate dipeptide utilization. Overall, this investigation has provided a list of genes involved directly and indirectly in the utilization of dipeptides in yeast. In our screen, 53 genes encoding proteins with >30% identity to human genes have been identified (see supplemental Tables S3 and S4, footnote a, at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/). To date no genes have been reported in the regulation of the human PTR2 homologs PEPT1 and PEPT2 (Daniel 2004). Further investigation of these human genes may promote understanding of the regulation of dipeptide utilization in mammalian systems. This study represents the first such global analysis of a membrane transport process and as such provides a rich starting ground for future investigations. Acknowledgments We thank Melinda Hauser, Amy Wiles, and Tom Masi for helpful discussions and critical review of the manuscript. References
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