Abstract

In animal cells, Akt (also called protein kinase B) is activated by stimuli that elevate the level of phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate and is a major effector for eliciting responses that support cell growth and survival. We have shown previously that co-expression of Akt1 in budding yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) along with hyperactive p110alpha, the catalytic subunit of mammalian phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, results in Akt1 relocalization to cellular membranes and activation. In the present study, we show that activation of all three mammalian Akt isoforms by wild-type p110alpha causes deleterious effects on yeast cell growth. Toxicity of Akt in S. cerevisiae required its catalytic activity, its pleckstrin homology domain, and phosphorylation of its activation loop, but not phosphorylation of its hydrophobic motif. We demonstrate that expression in yeast of the only purported oncogenic allele, Akt1(E17K), leads to enhanced phenotypes. Ala-scanning mutagenesis of the VL1 region within the phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-trisphosphate-interacting pocket of the Akt1 pleckstrin homology domain revealed that most residues in this region are essential for Akt1 activity. We found that active Akt leads to enhanced signaling through the yeast cell wall integrity pathway. This effect requires the upstream Rho1 activator Rom2 and involves both phosphorylation of the MAPK Slt2 and expression of its transcriptional targets, thus providing a quantitative reporter system for heterologous Akt activity in vivo. Collectively, our results disclose a heterologous yeast system that allows the functional assessment in vivo of both loss-of-function and tumorigenic Akt alleles.

Highlights

  • Protein kinase C) family of protein kinases and is considered a central player in regulation of metabolism, cell survival, apoptosis, cellular proliferation, motility, transcription and cellcycle progression [1, 2]

  • In Vivo Activated Mammalian Akt1 Impairs Yeast Growth— In previous reports, we have shown that expression of membrane-targeted mammalian class I PI3K catalytic subunit (p110␣-CAAX) driven by the galactose-inducible GAL1 promoter inhibited yeast growth, mainly by depletion of essential phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) pools [22]

  • If it is true that Akt1 toxicity depends on intracellular PIP3 levels, it should be relieved by co-expression of the tumor suppressor PTEN, which operates as a PIP3 3-phosphatase

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Summary

Introduction

Protein kinase C) family of protein kinases and is considered a central player in regulation of metabolism, cell survival, apoptosis, cellular proliferation, motility, transcription and cellcycle progression [1, 2]. We described that heterologous expression of PI3K, PTEN, and Akt1 in S. cerevisiae reproduces several aspects of their function, including PIP3-dependent membrane translocation and phosphorylation of Akt1 at both activation residues by the yeast PDK1 orthologs and an unidentified endogenous kinase [22].

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