Structure-function analysis of yeast mRNA cap methyltransferase and high-copy suppression of conditional mutants by AdoMet synthase and the ubiquitin cojugating enzyme Cdc34p Journal Article


Authors: Schwer, B.; Saha, N.; Mao, X.; Chen, H. W.; Shuman, S.
Article Title: Structure-function analysis of yeast mRNA cap methyltransferase and high-copy suppression of conditional mutants by AdoMet synthase and the ubiquitin cojugating enzyme Cdc34p
Abstract: Here we present a genetic analysis of the yeast cap-methylating enzyme Abd1p. To identify individual amino acids required for Abd1p function, we introduced alanine mutations at 35 positions of the 436-amino acid yeast protein. Two new recessive lethal mutations, F256A and Y330A, were identified. Alleles F256L and Y256L were viable, suggesting that hydrophobic residues at these positions sufficed for Abd1p function. Conservative mutations of Asp-178 established that an acidic moiety is essential at this position (i.e., D178E was viable whereas D178N was not). Phe-256, Tyr-330, and Asp-178 are conserved in all known cellular cap methyltransferases. We isolated temperature-sensitive abd1 alleles and found that abd1-ts cells display a rapid shut-off of protein synthesis upon shift to the restrictive temperature, without wholesale reduction in steady-state mRNA levels. These in vivo results are consistent with classical biochemical studies showing a requirement for the cap methyl group in cap-dependent translation. We explored the issue of how cap methylation might be regulated in vivo by conducting a genetic screen for high-copy suppressors of the ts growth defect of abd1 mutants. The identification of the yeast genes SAM2 and SAM1, which encode AdoMet synthase, as abd1 suppressors suggests that Abd1p function can be modulated by changes in the concentration of its substrate AdoMet. We also identified the ubiquitin conjugating enzyme Cdc34p as a high-copy abd1 suppressor. We show that mutations of Cdc34p that affect its ubiquitin conjugation activity or its capacity to interact with the E3-SCF complex abrogate its abd1 suppressor function. Moreover, the growth defect of abd1 mutants is exacerbated by cdc34-2. These findings suggest a novel role for Cdc34p in gene expression and engender a model whereby cap methylation or cap utilization is negatively regulated by a factor that is degraded when Cdc34p is overexpressed.
Keywords: methylation; mutation; nonhuman; phenotype; gene expression; alleles; structure activity relation; structure-activity relationship; tyrosine; time factors; methyltransferase; methyltransferases; amino acid sequence; molecular sequence data; sequence homology, amino acid; messenger rna; protein synthesis; saccharomyces cerevisiae; rna, messenger; rna translation; plasmids; temperature; amino acid; mutagenesis, site-directed; yeast; alanine; ubiquitin-protein ligases; aspartic acid; ribonucleases; gene expression regulation, fungal; phenylalanine; electrophoresis, polyacrylamide gel; ubiquitin conjugating enzyme; ligases; fungal proteins; ubiquitin-protein ligase complexes; enzyme repression; suppression, genetic; methionine adenosyltransferase; humans; priority journal; article
Journal Title: Genetics
Volume: 155
Issue: 4
ISSN: 0016-6731
Publisher: Genetics Society of America  
Date Published: 2000-08-01
Start Page: 1561
End Page: 1576
Language: English
PUBMED: 10924457
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC1461192
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 18 November 2015 -- Source: Scopus
Citation Impact
MSK Authors
  1. Stewart H Shuman
    546 Shuman
  2. Nayanendu Saha
    23 Saha