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Gene Expression

Transcriptional Profiling Shows that Gcn4p Is a Master Regulator of Gene Expression during Amino Acid Starvation in Yeast

, , , , , & show all
Pages 4347-4368 | Received 08 Feb 2001, Accepted 03 Apr 2001, Published online: 28 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Starvation for amino acids induces Gcn4p, a transcriptional activator of amino acid biosynthetic genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In an effort to identify all genes regulated by Gcn4p during amino acid starvation, we performed cDNA microarray analysis. Data from 21 pairs of hybridization experiments using two different strains derived from S288c revealed that more than 1,000 genes were induced, and a similar number were repressed, by a factor of 2 or more in response to histidine starvation imposed by 3-aminotriazole (3AT). Profiling of a gcn4Δ strain and a constitutively induced mutant showed that Gcn4p is required for the full induction by 3AT of at least 539 genes, termed Gcn4p targets. Genes in every amino acid biosynthetic pathway except cysteine and genes encoding amino acid precursors, vitamin biosynthetic enzymes, peroxisomal components, mitochondrial carrier proteins, and autophagy proteins were all identified as Gcn4p targets. Unexpectedly, genes involved in amino acid biosynthesis represent only a quarter of the Gcn4p target genes. Gcn4p also activates genes involved in glycogen homeostasis, and mutant analysis showed that Gcn4p suppresses glycogen levels in amino acid-starved cells. Numerous genes encoding protein kinases and transcription factors were identified as targets, suggesting that Gcn4p is a master regulator of gene expression. Interestingly, expression profiles for 3AT and the alkylating agent methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) overlapped extensively, and MMS inducedGCN4 translation. Thus, the broad transcriptional response evoked by Gcn4p is produced by diverse stress conditions. Finally, profiling of a gcn4Δ mutant uncovered an alternative induction pathway operating at many Gcn4p target genes in histidine-starved cells.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Steve Elledge, Orna Cohen-Fix, Ted Weinert, and Yoshinori Ohsumi for yeast strains. We thank Allan Jones and Chris Armour for coordination of the microarray experiments, including the GCN4 constitutive experiment; Tom Dever, Ronda Rolfes, Orna Cohen-Fix, Minerva Garcia, and members of the Hinnebusch laboratory for helpful discussions; and Tom Dever and Klaus Nielsen for critical reading of the manuscript. We also thank Zhixiong Xue for communicating results prior to publication. We thank the Center for Information Technology at NIH for assistance with Excel programming, and we acknowledge the Saccharomyces Genome Database and Yeast Protein Database for access to gene annotations.

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