Abstract

The environmental stress response (ESR) is critical for cell survival. Yeast cells unable to synthesize inositol pyrophosphates (PP-InsPs) are unable to induce the ESR. We recently discovered a diphosphoinositol pentakisphosphate (PP-InsP5) phosphatase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae encoded by SIW14 Yeast strains deleted for SIW14 have increased levels of PP-InsPs. We hypothesized that strains with high inositol pyrophosphate levels will have an increased stress response. We examined the response of the siw14Δ mutant to heat shock, nutrient limitation, osmotic stress, and oxidative treatment using cell growth assays and found increased resistance to each. Transcriptional responses to oxidative and osmotic stresses were assessed using microarray and reverse transcriptase quantitative PCR. The ESR was partially induced in the siw14Δ mutant strain, consistent with the increased stress resistance, and the mutant strain further induced the ESR in response to oxidative and osmotic stresses. The levels of PP-InsPs increased in WT cells under oxidative stress but not under hyperosmotic stress, and they were high and unchanging in the mutant. Phosphatase activity of Siw14 was inhibited by oxidation that was reversible. To determine how altered PP-InsP levels affect the ESR, we performed epistasis experiments with mutations in rpd3 and msn2/4 combined with siw14Δ. We show that mutations in msn2Δ and msn4Δ, but not rpd3, are epistatic to siw14Δ by assessing growth under oxidative stress conditions and expression of CTT1 Msn2-GFP nuclear localization was increased in the siw14Δ. These data support a model in which the modulation of PP-InsPs influence the ESR through general stress response transcription factors Msn2/4.

Highlights

  • The environmental stress response (ESR) is critical for cell survival

  • These results suggest that the histone deacetylase activity of Rpd3L is regulated by inositol pyrophosphates, and we hypothesized that increased inositol pyrophosphate levels would affect Rpd3L activity leading to increased gene expression and stress resistance

  • Using growth assays and gene expression analysis, we demonstrated that SIW14 is a negative regulator of the stress response at least partially through Msn2/4

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Summary

ARTICLE cro

The kinase Vip pyrophosphorylates the 1-position of 5PPInsP5, resulting in 1,5-bisdiphosphoinositol tetrakisphosphate (1,5PP-InsP4, known as InsP8), as well as on InsP6, resulting in 1PP-InsP5, an isomer of InsP7 [23, 24] Deletion of both KCS1 and VIP1 prevents cells from producing inositol pyrophosphates; importantly, these cells are unable to induce the environmental stress response with either osmotic or oxidative stresses based on transcriptional profiling assays [15]. We sought to determine how inositol pyrophosphates may influence the stress response by using epistasis to examine roles for Msn2/4 and Rpd3L These data demonstrate that increased intracellular levels of inositol pyrophosphates partially induce the ESR through Msn2/4 and support the role for the SIW14-encoded InsP7 phosphatase in regulating levels of inositol pyrophosphates

Results
Discussion
Strains and plasmids
Growth conditions
Chronological aging assays
Microarray analysis
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