Abstract

Cells grow in response to nutrients or growth factors, whose presence is detected and communicated by elaborate signaling pathways. Protein kinases play crucial roles in processes such as cell cycle progression and gene expression, and misregulation of such pathways has been correlated with various diseased states. Signals intended to promote cell growth converge on ribosome biogenesis, as the ability to produce cellular proteins is intimately tied to cell growth. Part of the response to growth signals is therefore the coordinate expression of genes encoding ribosomal RNA (rRNA) and ribosomal proteins (RP). A key player in regulating cell growth is the Target of Rapamycin (TOR) kinase, one of the gatekeepers that prevent cell cycle progression from G1 to S under conditions of nutritional stress. TOR is structurally and functionally conserved in all eukaryotes. Under favorable growth conditions, TOR is active and cells maintain a robust rate of ribosome biogenesis, translation initiation and nutrient import. Under stress conditions, TOR signaling is suppressed, leading to cell cycle arrest, while the failure of TOR to respond appropriately to environmental or nutritional signals leads to uncontrolled cell growth. Emerging evidence from Saccharomyces cerevisiae indicates that High Mobility Group (HMGB) proteins, non-sequence-specific chromosomal proteins, participate in mediating responses to growth signals. As HMGB proteins are distinguished by their ability to alter DNA topology, they frequently function in the assembly of higher-order nucleoprotein complexes. We review here recent evidence, which suggests that HMGB proteins may function to coordinate TOR-dependent regulation of rRNA and RP gene expression.

Highlights

  • Eukaryotic cell growth is regulated by intricate signaling pathways in response to nutrient levels, environmental stress and the presence of growth factors

  • At most ribosomal proteins (RP) gene promoters, HMO1 appears to associate in a repressor-activator protein 1 (Rap1)-dependent fashion, followed or accompanied by FHL1; at the promoters to which HMO1 only associates modestly, FHL1 binding appears independent of HMO1 [73]

  • The transcription factor IFH1 is essential, consistent with its reported role as a coactivator of RP gene transcription; if IFH1 is absent, the corepressor CRF1 would encounter no competition for binding to FHL1, potentially abolishing even basal levels of RP transcription

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Summary

Introduction

Eukaryotic cell growth is regulated by intricate signaling pathways in response to nutrient levels, environmental stress and the presence of growth factors. A recent study showed that rapamycin and nutrient starvation causes rapid delocalization of RNA Pol I from the nucleolus, suggesting a possible mechanism for the regulation of rDNA transcription by TOR [35].

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