In
cells grown in non-preferred nitrogen medium or treated with rapamycin, Gln3 is
dephosphorylated and is transported from the cytoplasm to the nucleus, thereby
activating the transcription of NCR-sensitive genes. Caffeine treatment also
induces dephosphorylation of Gln3 and its translocation to the nucleus and
transcription of NCR-sensitive genes. However, the details of the mechanism by
which phosphorylation controls Gln3 localization and transcriptional activity
are unknown. Here, we focused on two regions of Gln3 with nuclear localization
signal properties (NLS-K, and NLS-C) and one with nuclear export signal (NES).
We constructed various mutants for our analyses: gln3 containing point
mutations in all potential phosphoacceptor sites (Thr-339, Ser-344, Ser-347,
Ser-355, Ser-391) in the NLS and NES regions to produce non-phosphorylatable
(alanine) or mimic-phosphorylatable (aspartic acid) residues; and deletion
mutants. We found that phosphorylation of Gln3 was impaired in all of these
mutations and that the aspartic acid substitution mutants showed drastic
reduction of Gln3-mediated transcriptional activity despite the fact that the
mutations had no effect on nuclear localization of Gln3. Our observations
suggest that these regions are required for transcription of target genes presumably
through dephosphorylation.
Website: http://www.arjonline.org/biosciences/american-research-journal-of-biosciences/
Website: http://www.arjonline.org/biosciences/american-research-journal-of-biosciences/
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