Glutathione serves an extracellular defence function to decrease arsenite accumulation and toxicity in yeast.
Journal article, 2012

Arsenic is an environmental toxin and a worldwide health hazard. Since this metalloid is ubiquitous in nature, virtually all living organisms require systems for detoxification and tolerance acquisition. Here, we show that during chronic exposure to arsenite [As(III)], Saccharomyces cerevisiae (budding yeast) exports and accumulates the low-molecular-weight thiol molecule glutathione (GSH) outside of cells. Extracellular accumulation of the arsenite triglutathione complex As(GS)₃ was also detected and direct transport assays demonstrate that As(GS)₃ does not readily enter cells. Yeast cells with increased extracellular GSH levels accumulate less arsenic and display improved growth when challenged with As(III). Conversely, cells defective in export and extracellular accumulation of GSH are As(III) sensitive. Taken together, our data are consistent with a novel detoxification mechanism in which GSH is exported to protect yeast cells from arsenite toxicity by preventing its uptake.

drug effects

metabolism

growth & development

antagonists & inhibitors

Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Drug

antagonists & inhibitors

Arsenites

Antifungal Agents

Metabolic Detoxication

metabolism

metabolism

metabolism

Glutathione

Author

Michael Thorsen

University of Gothenburg

Therese Jacobson

University of Gothenburg

Riet Vooijs

Clara Navarrete Roman

University of Gothenburg

Tijs Bliek

Henk Schat

Markus J. Tamás

University of Gothenburg

Molecular Microbiology

0950-382X (ISSN) 1365-2958 (eISSN)

Vol. 84 6 1177-88

Subject Categories

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Microbiology

DOI

10.1111/j.1365-2958.2012.08085.x

PubMed

22554109

More information

Created

10/10/2017