Down-regulation of eukaryotic nitrate transporter by nitrogen-dependent ubiquitinylation

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Abstract

In the yeast Hansenula polymorpha, the YNT1 gene encodes the high affinity nitrate transporter, which is repressed by reduced nitrogen sources such as ammonium or glutamine. Ynt1 protein is degraded in response to glutamine in the growth medium. Ynt1 disappears independently of YNT1 glutamine repression as shown in strains where YNT1 repression is abolished. Ynt1-green fluorescent protein chimera and a mutant defective in vacuolar proteinase A (Δpep4) showed that Ynt1 is degraded in the vacuole in response to glutamine. The central hydrophilic domain of Ynt1 contains PEST-like sequences whose deletion blocked Ynt1 down-regulation. Site-directed mutagenesis showed that Lys-253 and Lys-270, located in this sequence, were involved in internalization and subsequent vacuolar degradation of Ynt1. Ynt1-ubiquitin conjugates were induced by glutamine and not nitrate. We conclude that glutamine triggers Ynt1 down-regulation via ubiquitinylation of lysines in the central hydrophilic domain, and proteolysis in the vacuole. © 2006 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Navarro, F. J., Machín, F., Martín, Y., & Siverio, J. M. (2006). Down-regulation of eukaryotic nitrate transporter by nitrogen-dependent ubiquitinylation. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 281(19), 13268–13274. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M601253200

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