Abstract

The translation termination factor Sup35p can form self-replicating fibrillar aggregates responsible for the [PSI+ ] prion state. Sup35p aggregation yields detergent-resistant assemblies detectable on agarose gels under semi-denaturant conditions and fluorescent puncta within the yeast cytosol when the protein is fused to GFP. It is still unclear whether any of these manifestations of [PSI+ ] truly correspond to the Sup35p assemblies that faithfully transmit the [PSI+ ] prion from mother to daughter cells. The infectious titer of prions in cells can be indirectly assessed by the ability of [PSI+ ] cells lysates to induce the prion state when introduced into naïve cells. Here, we report that the dramatic changes in the size and amounts of SDS-resistant Sup35p that occur during growth do not correlate with the infectious titer. Our results suggest that fluorescent Sup35-GFP puncta and detergent-resistant Sup35p assemblies are good indicators of Sup35p conversion to the prion state but not of infectious particles number.

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