The Saccharomyces cerevisiae aquaporin Aqy1 is involved in sporulation
Journal article, 2004

Aquaporins mediate rapid selective water transport across biological membranes. Elucidation of their precise physiological roles promises important insight into cellular and organismal osmoregulation. The genome of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes two similar but differentially regulated aquaporins. Here, we show that expression of AQY1 is stimulated during sporulation and that the Aqy1 protein is detectable exclusively in spore membranes. When spores are rapidly frozen, those that lack Aqy1 survive better, providing for a functional test of active spore water channels. Under ambient conditions, lack of Aqy1 reduces spore fitness. Because this reduction is independent from germination conditions, Aqy1 may be important during spore formation rather than subsequent maintenance or germination. Indeed, it seems that Aqy1 is degraded after spores have been formed and during germination. Taken together, Aqy1 is developmentally controlled and may play a role in spore maturation, probably by allowing water outflow. Taken together, we demonstrate a functional role of an aquaporin in gametogenesis, as well as in the formation of durable structures such as spores, a role that may have wider biological and medical implications.

aquaporins

water transport

gametogenesis

development

gene expression

Author

Frédéric Sidoux-Walter

University of Gothenburg

Nina Pettersson

University of Gothenburg

Stefan Hohmann

University of Gothenburg

PNAS

Vol. 101 50 17422-17427

Subject Categories

Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

DOI

10.1073/pnas.0404337101

More information

Created

10/10/2017