Abstract
Cells of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae choose bud sites in a manner that is dependent upon cell type: a and α cells select axial sites; a/α cells utilize bipolar sites. Mutants specifically defective in axial budding were isolated from an α strain using pseudohyphal growth as an assay. We found that a and α mutants defective in the previously identified PMT4 gene exhibit unipolar, rather than axial budding: mother cells choose axial bud sites, but daughter cells do not. PMT4 encodes a protein mannosyl transferase (pmt) required for O-linked glycosylation of some secretory and cell surface proteins (Immervoll, T., M. Gentzsch, and W. Tanner. 1995. Yeast. 11:1345- 1351). We demonstrate that Ax12/Bud10p, which is required for the axial budding pattern, is an O-linked glycoprotein and is incompletely glycosylated, unstable, and mislocalized in cells lacking PMT4. Overexpression of AXL2 can partially restore proper bud-site selection to pmt4 mutants. These data indicate that Ax12/Bud10p is glycosylated by Pmt4p and that O-linked glycosylation increases Ax12/Bud10p activity in daughter cells, apparently by enhancing its stability and promoting its localization to the plasma membrane.
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Sanders, S. L., Gentzsch, M., Tanner, W., & Herskowitz, I. (1999). O-glycosylation of Ax12/Bud10p by Pmt4p is required for its stability, localization, and function in daughter cells. Journal of Cell Biology, 145(6), 1177–1188. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.145.6.1177
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