Abstract

Ynt1 is the sole high affinity nitrate transporter of the yeast Hansenula polymorpha. It is highly regulated by the nitrogen source, by being down-regulated in response to glutamine by repression of the YNT1 gene and Ynt1 ubiquitinylation, endocytosis, and vacuolar degradation. On the contrary, we show that nitrogen limitation stabilizes Ynt1 levels at the plasma membrane, requiring phosphorylation of the transporter. We determined that Ser-246 in the central intracellular loop plays a key role in the phosphorylation of Ynt1 and that the nitrogen permease reactivator 1 kinase (Npr1) is necessary for Ynt1 phosphorylation. Abolition of phosphorylation led Ynt1 to the vacuole by a pep12-dependent end4-independent pathway, which is also dependent on ubiquitinylation, whereas Ynt1 protein lacking ubiquitinylation sites does not follow this pathway. We found that, under nitrogen limitation, Ynt1 phosphorylation is essential for rapid induction of nitrate assimilation genes. Our results suggest that, under nitrogen limitation, phosphorylation prevents Ynt1 delivery from the secretion route to the vacuole, which, aided by reduced ubiquitinylation, accumulates Ynt1 at the plasma membrane. This mechanism could be part of the response that allows nitrate-assimilatory organisms to cope with nitrogen depletion.

Highlights

  • Ilated in those environments where favorable nitrogen sources such as ammonium or glutamine are absent [6]

  • We have reported that the nitrogen source controls the amount of Ynt1; glutamine or ammonium triggers its ubiquitinylation, endocytosis, and vacuolar degradation [13]

  • Nitrogen Limitation Leads to Phosphorylation of Ynt1—Ynt1 transports nitrate and nitrite with high affinity; this system is essential when nitrate concentration is in the micromolar range or lower [10, 26]

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Summary

Introduction

Ilated in those environments where favorable nitrogen sources such as ammonium or glutamine are absent [6]. When cells were deprived of nitrogen source, Ynt1 protein was degraded slowly and remains associated with the plasma membrane (Fig. 1B).

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