A Novel Membrane Protein Capable of Binding the Na+/H + Antiporter (Nha1p) Enhances the Salinity-resistant Cell Growth of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

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Abstract

The Na+/H+ antiporter Nha1p of Saccharomyces cerevisiae plays an important role in maintaining intracellular pH and Na + homeostasis. Nha1p has a two-domain structure composed of integral membrane and hydrophilic tail regions. Overexpression of a peptide of ∼40 residues (C1+C2 domains) that is localized in the juxtamembrane area of its cytoplasmic tail caused cell growth retardation in highly saline conditions, possibly by decreasing Na+/H+ antiporter activity. A multicopy suppressor gene of this growth retardation was identified from a yeast genome library. The clone encodes a novel membrane protein denoted as COS3 in the genome data base. Overexpression or deletion of COS3 increases or decreases salinity-resistant cell growth, respectively. However, in nha1Δ cells, overexpression of COS3 alone did not suppress the growth retardation. Cos3p and a hydrophilic portion of Cos3p interact with the C1+C2 peptide in vitro, and Cos3p is co-precipitated with Nha1p from yeast cell extracts. Cos3p-GFP mainly resides at the vacuole, but overexpression of Nha1p caused a portion of the Cos3p-GFP proteins to shift to the cytoplasmic membrane. These observations suggest that Cos3p is a novel membrane protein that can enhance salinity-resistant cell growth by interacting with the C1+C2 domain of Nha1p and thereby possibly activating the antiporter activity of this protein.

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Mitsui, K., Ochi, F., Nakamura, N., Doi, Y., Inoue, H., & Kanazawa, H. (2004). A Novel Membrane Protein Capable of Binding the Na+/H + Antiporter (Nha1p) Enhances the Salinity-resistant Cell Growth of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(13), 12438–12447. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M310806200

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