Conditional Osmotic Stress in Yeast. A system to study transport through aquaglyceroporins and osmostress signaling
Journal article, 2005

The accumulation and transport of solutes are hallmarks of osmoadaptation. In this study we have employed the inability of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae gpd1{Delta} gpd2{Delta} mutant both to produce glycerol and to adapt to high osmolarity to study solute transport through aquaglyceroporins and the control of osmostress-induced signaling. High levels of different polyols, including glycerol, inhibited growth of the gpd1{Delta} gpd2{Delta} mutant. This growth inhibition was suppressed by expression of the hyperactive allele Fps1-{Delta}1 of the osmogated yeast aquaglyceroporin, Fps1. The degree of suppression correlated with the relative rate of transport of the different polyols tested. Transport studies in secretory vesicles confirmed that Fps1-{Delta}1 transports polyols at increased rates compared with wild type Fps1. Importantly, wild type Fps1 and Fps1-{Delta}1 showed similarly low permeability for water. The growth defect on polyols in the gpd1{Delta} gpd2{Delta} mutant was also suppressed by expression of a heterologous aquaglyceroporin, rat AQP9. We surmised that this suppression was due to polyol influx, causing the cells to passively adapt to the stress. Indeed, when aquaglyceroporin-expressing gpd1{Delta} gpd2{Delta} mutants were treated with glycerol, xylitol, or sorbitol, the osmosensing HOG pathway was activated, and the period of activation correlated with the apparent rate of polyol uptake. This observation supports the notion that deactivation of the HOG pathway is closely coupled to osmotic adaptation. Taken together, our "conditional" osmotic stress system facilitates studies on aquaglyceroporin function and reveals features of the osmosensing and signaling system.

Author

Sara Karlgren

University of Gothenburg

Nina Pettersson

University of Gothenburg

Bodil Nordlander

University of Gothenburg

John C. Mathai

Jeffrey L. Brodsky

Mark L. Zeidel

R Bill

Stefan Hohmann

University of Gothenburg

Journal of biological chemistry

Vol. 280 8 7186-7193

Subject Categories

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

DOI

10.1074/jbc.M413210200

More information

Created

10/10/2017