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Yeast VSM1 Encodes a v-SNARE Binding Protein That May Act as a Negative Regulator of Constitutive Exocytosis
Author(s) -
Vardit Lustgarten,
Jeffrey E. Gerst
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
molecular and cellular biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.14
H-Index - 327
eISSN - 1067-8824
pISSN - 0270-7306
DOI - 10.1128/mcb.19.6.4480
Subject(s) - biology , regulator , yeast , exocytosis , microbiology and biotechnology , negative regulator , genetics , gene , signal transduction , membrane
We have screened for proteins that interact with v-SNAREs of the late secretory pathway in the yeastSaccharomyces cerevisiae . A novel protein, designated Vsm1, binds tightly to the Snc2 v-SNARE in the two-hybrid system and can be coimmunoprecipitated with Snc1 or Snc2 from solubilized yeast cell extracts. Disruption of theVSM1 gene results in an increase of proteins secreted into the medium but does not affect the processing or secretion of invertase. In contrast,VSM1 overexpression in cells which bear a temperature-sensitive mutation in the Sec9 t-SNARE (sec9-4 cells) results in the accumulation of non-invertase-containing low-density secretory vesicles, inhibits cell growth and the secretion of proteins into the medium, and blocks rescue of the temperature-sensitive phenotype bySNC1 overexpression. Yet,VSM1 overexpression does not affect yeast bearing asec9-7 allele which, in contrast tosec9-4 , encodes a t-SNARE protein capable of forming a stable SNARE complex in vitro at restrictive temperatures. On the basis of these results, we propose that Vsm1 is a novel v-SNARE-interacting protein that appears to act as negative regulator of constitutive exocytosis. Moreover, this regulation appears specific to one of two parallel exocytic paths which are operant in yeast cells.

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