JOURNAL ARTICLE

Upstream region of the SUC2 gene confers regulated expression to a heterologous gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Laura SarokinMarian Carlson

Year: 1985 Journal:   Molecular and Cellular Biology Vol: 5 (10)Pages: 2521-2526   Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Abstract

The SUC2 gene produces two differently regulated mRNAs that encode two forms of invertase. The 1.9-kilobase mRNA encoding secreted invertase is regulated by glucose (carbon catabolite) repression, and the 1.8-kilobase mRNA encoding intracellular invertase is synthesized constitutively. Previous work has shown that the 5' noncoding region between -650 and -418 is required for derepression of secreted invertase in response to glucose deprivation. We show here that this upstream region can confer glucose-repressible expression to a heterologous gene, a LEU2-lacZ gene fusion, that is not normally regulated by glucose repression. This expression was found to respond appropriately to mutations in trans-acting genes that affect regulation of SUC2 expression. Mutations in the SNF1 through SNF6 loci reduced derepression of beta-galactosidase, and a mutation at the SSN6 locus caused constitutive expression. These findings indicate that the SUC2 upstream region mediates the regulatory effects of these genes and suggest that regulation occurs at the level of transcription. In addition, the upstream region was partially active in the inverted orientation.

Keywords:
Derepression Biology Catabolite repression Invertase Gene Gene expression Regulation of gene expression Molecular biology Saccharomyces cerevisiae Psychological repression Regulatory sequence Transcription (linguistics) Genetics Biochemistry Mutant Enzyme

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Citation History

Topics

Plant nutrient uptake and metabolism
Life Sciences →  Agricultural and Biological Sciences →  Plant Science
Fungal and yeast genetics research
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
Microbial Metabolites in Food Biotechnology
Health Sciences →  Nursing →  Nutrition and Dietetics
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