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Showing papers by "Chris A. Kaiser published in 2006"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Reduced Ero1p can catalyze reduction of exogenous FAD in solution and drive disulfide bond formation under anaerobic conditions in the endoplasmic reticulum.
Abstract: Ero1p is a key enzyme in the disulfide bond formation pathway in eukaryotic cells in both aerobic and anaerobic environments. It was previously demonstrated that Ero1p can transfer electrons from thiol substrates to molecular oxygen. However, the fate of electrons under anaerobic conditions and the final fate of electrons under aerobic conditions remained obscure. To address these fundamental issues in the Ero1p mechanism, we studied the transfer of electrons from recombinant yeast Ero1p to various electron acceptors. Under aerobic conditions, reduction of molecular oxygen by Ero1p yielded stoichiometric hydrogen peroxide. Remarkably, we found that reduced Ero1p can transfer electrons to a variety of small and macromolecular electron acceptors in addition to molecular oxygen. In particular, Ero1p can catalyze reduction of exogenous FAD in solution. Free FAD is not required for the catalysis of dithiol oxidation by Ero1p, but it is sufficient to drive disulfide bond formation under anaerobic conditions. These findings provide insight into mechanisms for regenerating oxidized Ero1p and maintaining disulfide bond formation under anaerobic conditions in the endoplasmic reticulum.

351 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Together, these studies provide evidence that the GSE complex has a key role in trafficking Gap1p out of the endosome and may serve as coat proteins in this process.
Abstract: The Saccharomyces cerevisiae general amino-acid permease, Gap1p, is a model for membrane proteins that are regulated by intracellular sorting according to physiological cues set by the availability of amino acids. Here, we report the identification of a conserved sorting complex for Gap1p, named the GTPase-containing complex for Gap1p sorting in the endosomes (GSE complex), which is required for proper sorting of Gap1p from the late endosome for eventual delivery to the plasma membrane. The complex contains two small GTPases (Gtr1p and Gtr2p) and three other proteins (Ybr077c, Ykr007w and Ltv1p) that are located in the late endosomal membrane. Importantly, Gtr2p interacts with the carboxy (C)-terminal cytosolic domain of Gap1p and a tyrosine-containing motif in this domain is necessary both to bind Gtr2p and to direct sorting of Gap1p to the plasma membrane. Together, these studies provide evidence that the GSE complex has a key role in trafficking Gap1p out of the endosome and may serve as coat proteins in this process.

179 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors discuss the functional, mechanistic, and potential structural similarities between these homologs and the core enzymes of the characterized ER oxidation pathways, and speculate about the possible differences between these enzymes that may explain why the cell contains multiple proteins dedicated to a single process.
Abstract: Two pathways for the formation of biosynthetic protein disulfide bonds have been characterized in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of eukaryotes. In the major pathway, the membrane-associated flavopr...

116 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that wild-type ScErv2 has evolved to repress activity on substrates of this type, perhaps in favor of a different, as yet unknown, substrate.

82 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In a genome-wide screen for mutations that affect Gap1p sorting, deletions in a subset of components of the ESCRT (endosomal sorting complex required for transport) complex are identified, which is required for formation of the multivesicular endosome (MVE).
Abstract: Intracellular sorting of the general amino acid permease (Gap1p) in Saccharomyces cerevisiae depends on availability of amino acids such that at low amino acid concentrations Gap1p is sorted to the plasma membrane, whereas at high concentrations Gap1p is sorted to the vacuole. In a genome-wide screen for mutations that affect Gap1p sorting we identified deletions in a subset of components of the ESCRT (endosomal sorting complex required for transport) complex, which is required for formation of the multivesicular endosome (MVE). Gap1p-GFP is delivered to the vacuolar interior by the MVE pathway in wild-type cells, but when formation of the MVE is blocked by mutation, Gap1p-GFP efficiently cycles from this compartment to the plasma membrane, resulting in unusually high permease activity at the cell surface. Importantly, cycling of Gap1p-GFP to the plasma membrane is blocked by high amino acid concentrations, defining recycling from the endosome as a major step in Gap1p trafficking under physiological control. Mutations in LST4 and LST7 genes, previously identified for their role in Gap1p sorting, similarly block MVE to plasma membrane trafficking of Gap1p. However, mutations in other recycling complexes such as the retromer had no significant effect on the intracellular sorting of Gap1p, suggesting that Gap1p follows a genetically distinct pathway for recycling. We previously found that Gap1p sorting from the Golgi to the endosome requires ubiquitination of Gap1p by an Rsp5p ubiquitin ligase complex, but amino acid abundance does not appear to significantly alter the accumulation of polyubiquitinated Gap1p. Thus the role of ubiquitination appears to be a signal for delivery of Gap1p to the MVE, whereas amino acid abundance appears to control the cycling of Gap1p from the MVE to the plasma membrane.

81 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A mixed disulfide species is identified that confirms the Ero1p intercysteine thiol-transfer relay in vivo and identifies Cys105 and Cys352 as the cysteines that mediateThiol-disulfide exchange and Ero 1p mutants that have the surprising ability to oxidize substrates in the absence of Cys100-Cys105 are described.
Abstract: The membrane-associated flavoprotein Ero1p promotes disulfide bond formation in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by selectively oxidizing the soluble oxidoreductase protein disulfide isomerase (Pdi1p), which in turn can directly oxidize secretory proteins. Two redox-active disulfide bonds are essential for Ero1p oxidase activity: Cys100-Cys105 and Cys352-Cys355. Genetic and structural data indicate a disulfide bond is transferred from Cys100-Cys105 directly to Pdi1p, whereas a Cys352-Cys355 disulfide bond is used to reoxidize the reduced Cys100-Cys105 pair through an internal thiol-transfer reaction. Electron transfer from Cys352-Cys355 to molecular oxygen, by way of a flavin cofactor, maintains Cys352-Cys355 in an oxidized form. Herein, we identify a mixed disulfide species that confirms the Ero1p intercysteine thiol-transfer relay in vivo and identify Cys105 and Cys352 as the cysteines that mediate thiol-disulfide exchange. Moreover, we describe Ero1p mutants that have the surprising ability to oxidize substrates in the absence of Cys100-Cys105. We show the oxidase activity of these mutants results from structural changes in Ero1p that allow substrates increased access to Cys352-Cys355, which are normally buried beneath the protein surface. The altered activity of these Ero1p mutants toward selected substrates leads us to propose the catalytic mechanism involving transfer between cysteine pairs evolved to impart substrate specificity to Ero1p.

77 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is reported that amino acid transport activity of Gap1p(K9R,K16R) can be rapidly and reversibly inactivated at the plasma membrane by the presence of amino acid mixtures, and a new mechanism for inhibition of permease activity in response to elevated amino acid levels is uncovered.
Abstract: The general amino acid permease, Gap1p, of Saccharomyces cerevisiae transports all naturally occurring amino acids into yeast cells for use as a nitrogen source. Previous studies have shown that a nonubiquitinateable form of the permease, Gap1p(K9R,K16R), is constitutively localized to the plasma membrane. Here, we report that amino acid transport activity of Gap1p(K9R,K16R) can be rapidly and reversibly inactivated at the plasma membrane by the presence of amino acid mixtures. Surprisingly, we also find that addition of most single amino acids is lethal to Gap1p(K9R,K16R)-expressing cells, whereas mixtures of amino acids are less toxic. This toxicity appears to be the consequence of uptake of unusually large quantities of a single amino acid. Exploiting this toxicity, we isolated gap1 alleles deficient in transport of a subset of amino acids. Using these mutations, we show that Gap1p inactivation at the plasma membrane does not depend on the presence of either extracellular or intracellular amino acids, but does require active amino acid transport by Gap1p. Together, our findings uncover a new mechanism for inhibition of permease activity in response to elevated amino acid levels and provide a physiological explanation for the stringent regulation of Gap1p activity in response to amino acids.

66 citations