4.6 Article

The Toxic Effects of Ppz1 Overexpression Involve Nha1-Mediated Deregulation of K+ and H+ Homeostasis

Journal

JOURNAL OF FUNGI
Volume 7, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jof7121010

Keywords

Ppz1 phosphatase; cation homeostasis; Nha1; intracellular pH; K+ transport; Saccharomyces cerevisiae

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Overexpression of Ppz1 disrupts the fine balance of phospho/dephosphorylation reactions in the cell, leading to cell proliferation blockage and changes in transcriptomic and phosphoproteomic profiles. The toxic effect is related to the overactivation of Nha1, resulting in excessive entry of H+ and efflux of K+, which is detrimental for cell growth. The deletion of NHA1 gene counteracts the growth defect caused by Ppz1 overexpression.
The alteration of the fine-tuned balance of phospho/dephosphorylation reactions in the cell often results in functional disturbance. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the overexpression of Ser/Thr phosphatase Ppz1 drastically blocks cell proliferation, with a profound change in the transcriptomic and phosphoproteomic profiles. While the deleterious effect on growth likely derives from the alteration of multiple targets, the precise mechanisms are still obscure. Ppz1 is a negative effector of potassium influx. However, we show that the toxic effect of Ppz1 overexpression is unrelated to the Trk1/2 high-affinity potassium importers. Cells overexpressing Ppz1 exhibit decreased K+ content, increased cytosolic acidification, and fail to properly acidify the medium. These effects, as well as the growth defect, are counteracted by the deletion of NHA1 gene, which encodes a plasma membrane Na+, K+/H+ antiporter. The beneficial effect of a lack of Nha1 on the growth vanishes as the pH of the medium approaches neutrality, is not eliminated by the expression of two non-functional Nha1 variants (D145N or D177N), and is exacerbated by a hyperactive Nha1 version (S481A). All our results show that high levels of Ppz1 overactivate Nha1, leading to an excessive entry of H+ and efflux of K+, which is detrimental for growth.

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