Abstract

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae CDC25 gene encodes a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for Ras proteins whose catalytic domain is highly homologous to Ras-guanine nucleotide exchange factors from higher eukaryotes. In this study, glucose-induced Ras activation and cAMP response were investigated in mutants lacking the N-terminal domain of Cdc25 or where the entire CDC25 coding sequence was substituted by an expression cassette for a mammalian guanine nucleotide exchange factor catalytic domain. Our results suggest that an unregulated, low Ras guanine nucleotide exchange factor activity allows a normal glucose-induced cAMP signal that appears to be mediated mainly by the Gpr1/Gpa2 system, but it was not enough to sustain the glucose-induced increase of Ras2-GTP normally observed in a wild-type strain.

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