Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2041768 Cell Reports 2015 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The yeast prion [SWI+] abolishes flocculin (FLO) expression and multicellularity•Insufficient Swi1 function is not the only cause of the defects in multicellularity•Multiple FLO gene upregulators undergo conformational changes in [SWI+] cells•Some FLO gene upregulators can exist as prion-like aggregates in [SWI+] cells

SummaryAlthough transcription factors are prevalent among yeast prion proteins, the role of prion-mediated transcriptional regulation remains elusive. Here, we show that the yeast prion [SWI+] abolishes flocculin (FLO) gene expression and results in a complete loss of multicellularity. Further investigation demonstrates that besides Swi1, multiple other proteins essential for FLO expression, including Mss11, Sap30, and Msn1 also undergo conformational changes and become inactivated in [SWI+] cells. Moreover, the asparagine-rich region of Mss11 can exist as prion-like aggregates specifically in [SWI+] cells, which are SDS resistant, heritable, and curable, but become metastable after separation from [SWI+]. Our findings thus reveal a prion-mediated mechanism through which multiple regulators in a biological pathway can be inactivated. In combination with the partial loss-of-function phenotypes of [SWI+] cells on non-glucose sugar utilization, our data therefore demonstrate that a prion can influence distinct traits differently through multi-level regulations, providing insights into the biological roles of prions.

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