Abstract

The yeast vacuolar H+-ATPase (V-ATPase) of budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) is regulated by reversible disassembly. Disassembly inhibits V-ATPase activity under low-glucose conditions by releasing peripheral V1 subcomplexes from membrane-bound Vo subcomplexes. V-ATPase reassembly and reactivation requires intervention of the conserved regulator of H+-ATPase of vacuoles and endosomes (RAVE) complex, which binds to cytosolic V1 subcomplexes and assists reassembly with integral membrane Vo complexes. Consistent with its role, the RAVE complex itself is reversibly recruited to the vacuolar membrane by glucose, but the requirements for its recruitment are not understood. We demonstrate here that RAVE recruitment to the membrane does not require an interaction with V1 Glucose-dependent RAVE localization to the vacuolar membrane required only intact Vo complexes containing the Vph1 subunit, suggesting that the RAVE-Vo interaction is glucose-dependent. We identified a short conserved sequence in the center of the RAVE subunit Rav1 that is essential for the interaction with Vph1 in vivo and in vitro Mutations in this region resulted in the temperature- and pH-dependent growth phenotype characteristic of ravΔ mutants. However, this region did not account for glucose sensitivity of the Rav1-Vph1 interaction. We quantitated glucose-dependent localization of a GFP-tagged RAVE subunit to the vacuolar membrane in several mutants previously implicated in altering V-ATPase assembly state or glucose-induced assembly. RAVE localization did not correlate with V-ATPase assembly levels reported previously in these mutants, highlighting both the catalytic nature of RAVE's role in V-ATPase assembly and the likelihood of glucose signaling to RAVE independently of V1.

Highlights

  • The yeast vacuolar H؉-ATPase (V-ATPase) of budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) is regulated by reversible disassembly

  • The results indicate that the regulator of H؉-ATPase of vacuoles and endosomes (RAVE) complex itself can be recruited to the vacuolar membrane without V1 and that its steady-state localization does not strictly follow that of V1 subcomplexes

  • Levels of RAVE subunits in isolated cytosolic fractions do not change with glucose levels [17], and very little RAVE is isolated with vacuolar membranes containing the V-ATPase

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

RAVE catalyzes recruitment of cytosolic V1 and V1 subunit C to the vacuolar membrane and assembly of functional V-ATPases. We identified a six amino acid conserved motif in this region that is required for interaction of Rav1 679 – 898 with Vph1NT in vitro and for recruitment of RAVE to the vacuolar membrane in vivo. This interaction is not intrinsically glucose-sensitive, we tested whether mutations previously associated with altered assembly or reversible disassembly of the V-ATPase would affect steady-state levels of RAVE at the membrane in the presence or absence of glucose. The results indicate that the RAVE complex itself can be recruited to the vacuolar membrane without V1 and that its steady-state localization does not strictly follow that of V1 subcomplexes

Results
Discussion
Experimental procedures

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