Abstract

Cells make decisions based on a combination of external and internal signals. In yeast, the high osmolarity response (HOG) is a mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway that responds to a variety of stimuli, and it is central to the general stress response. Here we studied the effect of heat-stress (HS) on HOG. Using live-cell reporters and genetics, we show that HS promotes Hog1 phosphorylation and Hog1-dependent gene expression, exclusively via the Sln1 phosphorelay branch, and that the strength of the activation is larger in yeast adapted to high external osmolarity. HS stimulation of HOG is indirect. First, we show that HS causes glycerol loss, necessary for HOG activation. Preventing glycerol efflux by deleting the glyceroporin FPS1 or its regulators RGC1 and ASK10/RGC2, or by increasing external glycerol, greatly reduced HOG activation. Second, we found that HOG stimulation by HS depended on the operation of a second MAPK pathway, the cell-wall integrity (CWI), a well-known mediator of HS, since inactivating Pkc1 or deleting the MAPK SLT2 greatly reduced HOG activation. Our data suggest that the main role of the CWI in this process is to stimulate glycerol loss. We found that in yeast expressing the constitutively open channel mutant (Fps1-Δ11), HOG activity was independent of Slt2. In summary, we suggest that HS causes a reduction in turgor due to the loss of glycerol and the accompanying water, and that this is what actually stimulates HOG. Thus, taken together, our findings highlight a central role for Fps1, and the metabolism of glycerol, in the communication between the yeast MAPK pathways, essential for survival and reproduction in changing environments.

Highlights

  • Sensing and responding to the environment is critical for survival

  • Our previous studies on the crosstalk between mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways indicated that activation of the cell-wall integrity (CWI) by mating pheromone causes High Osmolarity Glycerol (HOG) activation[27], especially noticeable in yeast pre-adapted to high osmolarity medium

  • In yeast grown in SC supplemented with 1 M sorbitol, there was a fast increase in YFP synthesis

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Summary

Introduction

Sensing and responding to the environment is critical for survival. In eukaryotic cells, mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways mediate the response to many different stimuli. The High Osmolarity Glycerol (HOG)[2] and the Cell Wall Integrity (CWI)[3] pathways are activated by a variety of environmental changes/conditions. CWI signaling is typically activated by several mucin-like proteins that operate as sensors connecting the plasma membrane and cell wall, and which display varying specificities for different stimuli. These sensors (Wsc[1,2,3], Mid[2] and Mtl1) recruit the guanine nucleotide exchange factors Rom[1] and Rom[2], which activate the small G-protein Rho[1]. Activation of Slt[2] by heat-stress requires the main pathway and extra input to Mkk[1,2], possibly from Cbk[1] and Bck[223]

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