Molecular Biology and Genetics / Moleküler Biyoloji ve Genetik
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/9
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Article Citation - WoS: 4Citation - Scopus: 3Boron Stress Signal Is Transmitted Through the Tor Pathway(Elsevier, 2023) Uluışık, İrem; Koç, AhmetAlthough boron is an essential element for many organisms, an excess amount of it can cause toxicity, and the mechanism behind this toxicity is not yet fully understood. The Gcn4 transcription factor plays a crucial role in the boron stress response by directly activating the expression of the boron efflux pump Atr1. More than a dozen transcription factors and multiple cell signaling pathways have roles in regulating the Gcn4 transcription factor under various circumstances. However, it is unknown which pathways or factors mediate boron signaling to Gcn4. Using the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a model, we analyzed the factors that converge on the Gcn4 transcription factor to assess their possible roles in boron stress signaling. Our findings show that the GCN system is activated by uncharged tRNA stress in response to boron treatment and that GCN1, which plays a role in transferring uncharged tRNAs to Gcn2, is necessary for the kinase activity of Gcn2. The SNF and PKA pathways were not involved in mediating boron stress, even though they interact with Gcn4. Mutations in TOR pathway genes, such as GLN3 and TOR1, abolished Gcn4 and ATR1 activation in response to boric acid treatment. Therefore, our study suggests that the TOR pathway must be functional to form a proper response against boric acid stress.Article Citation - WoS: 33Citation - Scopus: 40Characterization of Two Genes Encoding Metal Tolerance Proteins From Beta Vulgaris Subspecies Maritima That Confers Manganese Tolerance in Yeast(Springer Verlag, 2013) Erbaşol, Işıl; Bozdağ, Gönensin Ozan; Koç, Ahmet; Pedas, Pia; Karakaya, Hüseyin ÇağlarManganese (Mn2+) is an essential micronutrient in plants. However increased Mn2+ levels are toxic to plant cells. Metal tolerance proteins (MTPs), member of cation diffusion facilitator protein (CDF) family, have important roles in metal homeostatis in different plant species and catalyse efflux of excess metal ions. In this study, we identified and characterized two MTP genes from Beta vulgaris spp. maritima (B. v. ssp. maritima). Overexpression of these two genes provided Mn tolerance in yeast cells. Sequence analyses displayed BmMTP10 and BmMTP11as members of the Mn-CDF family. Functional analyses of these proteins indicated that they are specific to Mn2+ with a role in reducing excess cellular Mn2+ levels when expressed in yeast. GFP-fusion constructs of both proteins localized to the Golgi apparatus as a punctuated pattern. Finally, Q-RT-PCR results showed that BmMTP10 expression was induced threefold in response to the excess Mn2+ treatment. On the other hand BmMTP11 expression was not affected in response to excess Mn2+ levels. Thus, our results suggest that the BmMTP10 and BmMTP11 proteins from B. v. ssp. maritima have non-redundant functions in terms of Mn2+ detoxification with a similar in planta localization and function as the Arabidopsis Mn-CDF homolog AtMTP11 and this conservation shows the evolutionary importance of these vesicular proteins in heavy metal homeostatis among plant species.Article Citation - WoS: 20Citation - Scopus: 20Genome-Wide Identification of Genes That Play a Role in Boron Stress Response in Yeast(Elsevier Ltd., 2011) Uluışık, İrem; Kaya, Alaattin; Ünlü, Ercan Selçuk; Avşar, Kadir; Karakaya, Hüseyin Çağlar; Yalçın, Talat; Koç, AhmetBoron is an essential micronutrient for plants and it is either necessary or beneficial for animals. Studies identified only few genes related to boron metabolism thus far and details of how boron is imported into cells and used in cell metabolism are largely unknown. In order to identify genes that play roles in boron metabolism, we screened the entire set of yeast haploid deletion mutants and identified 6 mutants that were resistant to toxic levels of boron, and 21 mutants that were highly sensitive to boron treatment. Furthermore, we performed a proteomic approach to identify additional proteins that are significantly up-regulated by boron treatment. Our results revealed many genes and pathways related to boron stress response and suggest a possible link between boron toxicity and translational control.Article Citation - WoS: 5Citation - Scopus: 5Evidence for a Stabilizer Element in the Untranslated Regions of Drosophila Glutathione S-Transferase D1 Mrna(American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Inc., 2002) Akgül, Bünyamin; Tu, Chen-Pei D.The neighboring genes gstD1 and gstD21 share 70% sequence identity, gstD1 encodes a 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis-(P-chlorophenyl)ethane dehydrochlorinase; gstD21, a ligandin. Both of their mRNAs are inducible by pentobarbital but otherwise behave very differently. Intact gstD21 mRNA is intrinsically labile, but becomes stabilized when separated from its native untranslated region (UTR). In contrast, whereas gstD1 mRNA is very stable in its entirety, without its native UTRs it becomes even more labile than that of gstD21. Decay patterns from four chimeric D1-D21 mRNAs, designed to reveal the individual importance of each molecular region to stability, strongly indicate the presence of destabilizing elements in the coding region ofgstD1 mRNA. Thus, the UTRs of this molecule must contain a dominant stabilizer element that overrides the destabilizing influence of the coding region and confers overall stability to the entire molecule. The suspected presence of such a stabilizer element in gstD1 mRNA extends a concept from mRNA metabolism in yeast and cultured mammalian cells to include a multicellular organism, Drosophila melanogaster. The complementary presence of destabilizing and stabilizer elements on the same mRNA reveals a regulatory mechanism by which an abundant mRNA can be further induced by a chemical stimulus, or otherwise be returned to normal levels during recovery.
