Abstract

Plant sucrose nonfermenting-1 (SNF1)-related protein kinases (SnRK1s) have been shown to restore carbon catabolite derepression of gene expression in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae when expressed in snf1 mutants. SNF1 has been implicated in the mediation of cell cycle control in response to nutrient levels and, in the present study, we show that expression of the rye (Secale cereale) SnRK1, RKIN1, in a yeast snf1 mutant has a dramatic effect on the size of cells growing on a minimal medium where SNF1 function is essential. The mean volume of the yeast cells which were expressing RKIN1 was two-thirds that of the whi1 mutant, the smallest viable cells known in S. cerevisiae, and the cells died after 3 days unless rescued onto complex medium. This is the first experimental evidence of a role for SnRK1s in plant cell cycle control.

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