A yeast catabolic enzyme controls transcriptional memory

作者:Zacharioudakis Loannis; Gligorls Thomas; Tzamarias Dimitris*
来源:Current Biology, 2007, 17(23): 2041-2046.
DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2007.10.044

摘要

It has been postulated that chromatin modifications can persist through mitosis and meiosis, thereby securing memory of transcriptional states [1-4]. Whether these chromatin marks can self-propagate in progeny independently of relevant trans-acting factors is an important question in phenomena related to epigenesis. "Adaptive cellular memory" displayed by yeast cells offers a convenient system to address this question. The yeast GAL genes are slowly activated by Gal4 when cells are first exposed to galactose, but their progeny, grown in glucose media, exhibit a fast activation mode upon re-exposure to this sugar [5]. This "galactose memory" persists for several generations and was recently proposed to involve chromatin modifications and perinuclear topology of the GAL genes cluster [5, 6]. Here, we perform a heterokaryon assay demonstrating that this memory does not have a chromatin basis but is maintained by cytoplasmic factor(s) produced upon previous galactose induction. We show that Gal3, the cytoplasmic rate-limiting factor that releases the Gal4 activator, is dispensable for preserving galactose memory. Instead, the important memory determinant is a close Gal3 homolog, the highly expressed Gal1 galactokinase, the residual activity of which preserves memory in progeny cells by rapidly turning on the Gal4 activator upon cells' re-exposure to galactose.

  • 出版日期2007-12-4