AI Article Synopsis

  • The piD261/Bud32 protein in Saccharomyces cerevisiae represents a new family of protein kinases that are somewhat related to the larger eukaryotic protein kinase superfamily and is crucial for yeast cellular processes.
  • Deleting the gene for Bud32 disrupts essential functions like cell growth and sporulation, indicating its importance in vivo, although it can still function in some capacities without its catalytic activity.
  • Interactions with various proteins, such as Grx4 and Ykr038/Kae1, suggest that Bud32 has further roles beyond phosphorylation, with Grx4 being directly phosphorylated by Bud32 itself.

Article Abstract

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae piD261/Bud32 protein and its structural homologues, which are present along the Archaea-Eukarya lineage, constitute a novel protein kinase family (the piD261 family) distantly related in sequence to the eukaryotic protein kinase superfamily. It has been demonstrated that the yeast protein displays Ser/Thr phosphotransferase activity in vitro and contains all the invariant residues of the family. This novel protein kinase appears to play an important cellular role as deletion in yeast of the gene encoding piD261/Bud32 results in the alteration of fundamental processes such as cell growth and sporulation. In this work we show that the phosphotransferase activity of Bud32 is relevant to its functionality in vivo, but is not the unique role of the protein, since mutants which have lost catalytic activity but not native conformation can partially complement the disruption of the gene encoding piD261/Bud32. A two-hybrid approach has led to the identification of several proteins interacting with Bud32; in particular a glutaredoxin (Grx4), a putative glycoprotease (Ykr038/Kae1) and proteins of the Imd (inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase) family seem most plausible interactors. We further demonstrate that Grx4 directly interacts with Bud32 and that it is phosphorylated in vitro by Bud32 at Ser-134. The functional significance of the interaction between Bud32 and the putative protease Ykr038/Kae1 is supported by its evolutionary conservation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1223863PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/BJ20030638DOI Listing

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