4.2 Article

Genetic investigation of purine nucleotide imbalance inSaccharomyces cerevisiae

Journal

CURRENT GENETICS
Volume 66, Issue 6, Pages 1163-1177

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00294-020-01101-y

Keywords

Yeast metabolism; AMP deaminase; Adenine deaminase; GTP; Amino acid transport

Funding

  1. CNRS
  2. Universite de Bordeaux

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Because metabolism is a complex balanced process involving multiple enzymes, understanding how organisms compensate for transient or permanent metabolic imbalance is a challenging task that can be more easily achieved in simpler unicellular organisms. The metabolic balance results not only from the combination of individual enzymatic properties, regulation of enzyme abundance, but also from the architecture of the metabolic network offering multiple interconversion alternatives. Although metabolic networks are generally highly resilient to perturbations, metabolic imbalance resulting from enzymatic defect and specific environmental conditions can be designed experimentally and studied. Starting with a doubleamd1 aah1mutant that severely and conditionally affects yeast growth, we carefully characterized the metabolic shuffle associated with this defect. We established that the GTP decrease resulting in an adenylic/guanylic nucleotide imbalance was responsible for the growth defect. Identification of several gene dosage suppressors revealed thatTAT1, encoding an amino acid transporter, is a robust suppressor of theamd1 aah1growth defect. We show thatTAT1suppression occurs through replenishment of the GTP pool in a process requiring the histidine biosynthesis pathway. Importantly, we establish that atat1mutant exhibits synthetic sickness when combined with anamd1mutant and that both components of this synthetic phenotype can be suppressed by specific gene dosage suppressors. Together our data point to a strong phenotypic connection between amino acid uptake and GTP synthesis, a connection that could open perspectives for future treatment of related human defects, previously reported as etiologically highly conserved.

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