4.5 Article

Cell-to-cell heterogeneity of phosphate gene expression in yeast is controlled by alternative transcription, 14-3-3 and Spl2

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbagrm.2021.194714

Keywords

Phosphate metabolism; Saccharomyces cerevisiae; Non-coding transcription; Bimodal gene expression; Transcription start site

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) - Earth and Life Sciences (ALW) (SYSMO) [826.09.006]
  2. Generade

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The expression of low or high affinity phosphate transporters in yeast cells is dependent on phosphate availability, with specific genes such as RRP6 and BMH1 playing a role in regulating the expression of the regulator Spl2. Deletion of certain genes can result in changes in expression levels of specific regulators, leading to variations in gene expression among cells.
Dependent on phosphate availability the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae expresses either low or high affinity phosphate transporters. In the presence of phosphate yeast cells still express low levels of the high affinity phosphate transporter Pho84. The regulator Spl2 is expressed in approximately 90% of the cells, and is not expressed in the remaining cells. Here we report that deletion of RRP6, encoding an exonuclease degrading non-coding RNA, or BMH1, encoding the major 14-3-3 isoform, resulted in less cells expressing SPL2 and in increased levels of RNA transcribed from sequences upstream of the SPL2 coding region. SPL2 stimulates its own expression and that of PHO84 ensuing a positive feedback. Upon deletion of the region responsible for upstream SPL2 transcription almost all cells express SPL2. These results indicate that the cell-to-cell variation in PHO84 and SPL2 expression is dependent on a specific part of the SPL2 promoter and is controlled by Bmh1 and Spl2.

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