Abstract

Inorganic polyphosphate is a ubiquitous polymer with myriad roles in cell and organismal physiology. Whereas there is evidence for nuclear polyphosphate, its impact on transcriptional regulation in eukaryotes is unkown. Transcriptional profiling of fission yeast cells lacking polyphosphate (via deletion of the catalytic subunit Vtc4 of the Vtc4/Vtc2 polyphosphate polymerase complex) elicited de-repression of four protein-coding genes located within the right sub-telomeric arm of chromosome I that is known to be transcriptionally silenced by the TORC2 complex. These genes were equally de-repressed in vtc2 ∆ cells and in cells expressing polymerase-dead Vtc4, signifying that polyphosphate synthesis is required for repression of these sub-telomeric genes.

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