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- Title
Identification of Novel Mutations in ACT1 and SLA2 That Suppress the Actin-Cable-Overproducing Phenotype Caused by Overexpression of a Dominant Active Form of Bnilp in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
- Authors
Yoshiuchi, Shiro; Yamamoto, Takaharu; Sakane, Hiroshi; Kadota, Jun; Mochida, Junko; Asaka, Masahiro; Tanaka, Razuma
- Abstract
A formin Bnilp nucleates actin to assemble actin cables, which guide the polarized transport of secretory vesicles in budding yeast. We identified mutations that suppressed both the lethality and the excessive actin cable formation caused by overexpression of a truncated Bnilp (BNI1ΔN). Two recessive mutations, act1-301 in the actin gene and sla2-82 in a gene involved in cortical actin patch assembly, were identified. The isolation of sla2-82 was unexpected, because cortical actin patches are required for the internalization step of endocytosis. Both act1-301 and sla2-82 exhibited synthetic growth defects with bni1Δ. act1-301, which resulted in an E117K substitution, interacted genetically with mutations in profihin (PFY1) and BUD6, suggesting that Act1-301p was not fully functional in formin-mediated polymerization. sla2-82 also interacted genetically with genes involved in actin cable assembly. Some experiments, however, suggested that the effects of sla2-82 were caused by depletion of actin monomers, because the temperature-sensitive growth phenotype of the bni1Δ sla2-82 mutant was suppressed by increased expression of ACT1. The isolation of suppressors of the BNI1ΔN phenotype may provide a useful system for identification of actin amino-acid residues that are important for formin-mediated actin polymerization and mutations that affect the availability of actin monomers.
- Subjects
MUTAGENESIS; PHENOTYPES; GENETIC mutation; SACCHAROMYCES cerevisiae; GENETIC polymorphisms; ACTIN
- Publication
Genetics, 2006, Vol 173, Issue 2, p527
- ISSN
0016-6731
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1534/genetics.105.055210