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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Inositol regulates phosphatidylglycerolphosphate synthase expression in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

The enzyme phosphatidylglycerolphosphate synthase (PGPS; CDPdiacylglycerol-glycerol-3-phosphate 3-phosphatidyltransferase; EC 2.7.8.5) catalyzes the committed step in the synthesis of cardiolipin, a phospholipid found predominantly in the mitochondrial inner membrane. To determine whether PGPS is regulated by cross-pathway control, we analyzed PGPS expression under conditions in which the regulation of general phospholipid synthesis could be examined. The addition of inositol resulted in a three- to fivefold reduction in PGPS expression in wild-type cells in the presence or absence of exogenous choline. The reduction in enzyme activity in response to inositol was seen in minutes, suggesting that inactivation or degradation of the enzyme plays an important role in inositol-mediated repression of PGPS. In cho2 and opi3 mutants, which are blocked in phosphatidylcholine synthesis, inositol-mediated repression of PGPS did not occur unless choline was added to the media. Three previously identified genes that regulate general phospholipid synthesis, INO2, INO4, and OP11, did not affect PGPS expression. Thus, ino2 and ino4 mutants, which are unable to derepress biosynthetic enzymes involved in general phospholipid synthesis, expressed wild-type levels of PGPS activity under derepressing conditions. PGPS expression in the opi1 mutant, which exhibits constitutive synthesis of general phospholipid biosynthetic enzymes, was fully repressed in the presence of inositol and partially repressed even in the absence of inositol. These results demonstrate for the first time that an enzymatic step in cardiolipin synthesis is coordinately controlled with general phospholipid synthesis but that this control is not mediated by the same genetic regulatory circuit.[1]

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