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Mutation of the Ser18 phosphorylation site on the sole Saccharomyces cerevisiae UCS protein, She4, can compromise high-temperature survival

Version 4 2024-03-12, 15:01
Version 3 2023-10-29, 11:27
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 15:01 authored by Susana Gomez-Escalante, Peter W. Piper, Stefan MillsonStefan Millson

Folding of the myosin head often requires the joint actions of Hsp90 and a dedicated UNC45, Cro1, She4 (UCS) domain-containing cochaperone protein. Relatively weak sequence conservation exists between the single UCS protein of simple eukaryotes (She4 in budding yeast) and the two UCS proteins of higher organisms (the general cell and smooth muscle UNC45s; UNC45-GC and UNC45-SM respectively). In vertebrates, UNC45-GC facilitates cytoskeletal function whereas the 55% identical UNC45-SM assists in the assembly of the contractile apparatus of cardiac and skeletal muscles. UNC45-SM, unlike UNC45-GC, shares with yeast She4 an IDSL sequence motif known to be a site of in vivo serine phosphorylation in yeast. Investigating this further, we found that both a non-phosphorylatable (S18A) and a phosphomimetic (S18E) mutant form of She4 could rescue the type 1 myosin localisation and endocytosis defects of the yeast she4? mutant at 39 °C. Nevertheless, at higher temperature (45 °C), only She4 (S18A), not She4(S18E), could substantially rescue the cell lysis defect of she4? mutant cells. In the yeast two-hybrid system, the non-phosphorylatable S18A and S251A mutant forms of She4 and UNC45-SM still displayed the stress-enhanced in vivo interaction with Hsp90 seen with the wild-type She4 and UNC45-SM. Such high-temperature enforcement to interaction was though lost with the phosphomimetic mutant forms (She4(S18E) and UNC45-SM (S251E)), an indication that phosphorylation might suppress these increases in She4/Hsp90 and UNC45-SM/Hsp90 interaction with stress.

History

School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Cell Stress and Chaperones

Volume

22

Issue

1

Pages/Article Number

135-141

Publisher

Springer verlag

ISSN

1355-8145

eISSN

1466-1268

Date Submitted

2017-01-26

Date Accepted

2016-11-15

Date of First Publication

2016-11-25

Date of Final Publication

2017-01-22

Date Document First Uploaded

2017-01-24

ePrints ID

25895

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