Msn2p, a zinc finger DNA-binding protein, is the transcriptional activator of the multistress response in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
- 11 June 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 93 (12) , 5777-5782
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.93.12.5777
Abstract
The stress response promoter element (STRE) confers increased transcription to a set of genes following environmental or metabolic stress in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A lambda gt11 library was screened to isolate clones encoding STRE-binding proteins, and one such gene was identified as MSN2, which encoded a zinc-finger transcriptional activator. Disruption of the MSN2 gene abolished an STRE-binding activity in crude extracts as judged by both gel mobility-shift and Southwestern blot experiments, and overexpression of MSN2 intensified this binding activity. Northern blot analysis demonstrated that for the known or suspected STRE-regulated genes DDR2, CTT1, HSP12, and TPS2, transcript induction was impaired following heat shock or DNA damage treatment in the msn2-disrupted strain and was constitutively activated in a strain overexpressing MSN2. Furthermore, heat shock induction of a STRE-driven reporter gene was reduced more than 6-fold in the msn2 strain relative to wild-type cells. Taken together, these data indicate that Msn2p is the transcription factor that activates STRE-regulated genes in response to stress. Whereas nearly 85% of STRE-mediated heat shock induction was MSN2 dependent, there was significant MSN2-independent expression. We present evidence that the MSN2 homolog, MSN4, can partially replace MSN2 for transcriptional activation following stress. Moreover, our data provides evidence for the involvement of additional transcription factors in the yeast multistress response.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Rapid and Efficient PCR-Based Method for Synthesizing High-Molecular-Weight Multimers of OligonucleotidesBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1994
- The SAD1/RAD53 protein kinase controls multiple checkpoints and DNA damage-induced transcription in yeast.Genes & Development, 1994
- DUN1 encodes a protein kinase that controls the DNA damage response in yeastCell, 1993
- Pheromone-dependent phosphorylation of the yeast STE12 protein correlates with transcriptional activation.Genes & Development, 1991
- Basic local alignment search toolJournal of Molecular Biology, 1990
- Overproduction of the yeast STE12 protein leads to constitutive transcriptional induction.Genes & Development, 1990
- Yeast heat shock factor is an essential DNA-binding protein that exhibits temperature-dependent phosphorylationCell, 1988
- Heat shock factor is regulated differently in yeast and HeLa cellsNature, 1987
- A Yeast Gene That Is Essential for Release from Glucose Repression Encodes a Protein KinaseScience, 1986
- [16] Cloning regulated yeast genes from a pool of lacZ fusionsPublished by Elsevier ,1983