Abstract

Sensing and signaling the presence of extracellular glucose is crucial for the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae because of its fermentative metabolism, characterized by high glucose flux through glycolysis. The yeast senses glucose through the cell surface glucose sensors Rgt2 and Snf3, which serve as glucose receptors that generate the signal for induction of genes involved in glucose uptake and metabolism. Rgt2 and Snf3 detect high and low glucose concentrations, respectively, perhaps because of their different affinities for glucose. Here, we provide evidence that cell surface levels of glucose sensors are regulated by ubiquitination and degradation. The glucose sensors are removed from the plasma membrane through endocytosis and targeted to the vacuole for degradation upon glucose depletion. The turnover of the glucose sensors is inhibited in endocytosis defective mutants, and the sensor proteins with a mutation at their putative ubiquitin-acceptor lysine residues are resistant to degradation. Of note, the low affinity glucose sensor Rgt2 remains stable only in high glucose grown cells, and the high affinity glucose sensor Snf3 is stable only in cells grown in low glucose. In addition, constitutively active, signaling forms of glucose sensors do not undergo endocytosis, whereas signaling defective sensors are constitutively targeted for degradation, suggesting that the stability of the glucose sensors may be associated with their ability to sense glucose. Therefore, our findings demonstrate that the amount of glucose available dictates the cell surface levels of the glucose sensors and that the regulation of glucose sensors by glucose concentration may enable yeast cells to maintain glucose sensing activity at the cell surface over a wide range of glucose concentrations.

Highlights

  • In yeast, glucose is sensed by two cell surface glucose sensors

  • Glucose Starvation Induces Endocytosis and Vacuolar Degradation of Rgt2—To test the hypothesis that the cell surface levels of Rgt2 glucose sensor may be regulated by glucose concentration, we determined its expression levels in yeast cells grown in different glucose concentrations

  • Western blot analysis showed that the cell surface levels of Rgt2-HA are greater in high glucose-grown cells (2%) than in cells grown in low glucose medium (ϳ0.1%) and are very low in cells grown in the absence of glucose (Gal) (Fig. 1A)

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Summary

Background

Glucose is sensed by two cell surface glucose sensors. Results: The glucose sensors are down-regulated by ubiquitination and degradation. The yeast senses glucose through the cell cose demands high glycolytic flux, and yeast cells surface glucose sensors Rgt and Snf, which serve as glucose consume the available glucose vigorously by increasing glucose receptors that generate the signal for induction of genes uptake through glucose transporters (HXTs) [3, 5]. Our findings [20, 21] This view is strongly supported by the identification of demonstrate that the amount of glucose available dictates the a dominant mutation in the glucose sensor genes (RGT2-1 and cell surface levels of the glucose sensors and that the regulation SNF3-1), which is thought to convert the sensors into the gluof glucose sensors by glucose concentration may enable yeast cose-bound and glucose signaling forms [20]. We discuss the biological significance of this observation in the perspective of the fermentative metabolism of yeast, characterized by high glucose uptake and increased glycolytic activity

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