In yeast, mutations in the CDP-choline pathway for phosphatidylcholine biosynthesis permit the cell to grow even when the SEC14 gene is completely deleted (Cleves, A., McGee, T., Whitters, E., Champion, K., Aitken, J., Dowhan, W., Goebl, M., and Bankaitis, V. (1991) Cell 64, 789-800). We report that strains carrying mutations in the CDP-choline pathway, such as cki1, exhibit a choline excretion phenotype due to production of choline during normal turnover of phosphatidylcholine. Cells carrying cki1 in combination with sec14(ts), a temperature-sensitive allele in the gene encoding the phosphatidylinositol/phosphatidylcholine transporter, have a dramatically increased choline excretion phenotype when grown at the sec14(ts)-restrictive temperature. We show that the increased choline excretion in sec14(ts) cki1 cells is due to increased turnover of phosphatidylcholine via a mechanism consistent with phospholipase D-mediated turnover. We propose that the elevated rate of phosphatidylcholine turnover in sec14(ts) cki1 cells provides the metabolic condition that permits the secretory pathway to function when Sec14p is inactivated. As phosphatidylcholine turnover increases in sec14(ts) cki1 cells shifted to the restrictive temperature, the IN01 gene (encoding inositol-1-phosphate synthase) is also derepressed, leading to an inositol excretion phenotype (Opi-). Misregulation of the IN01 gene has been observed in many strains with altered phospholipid metabolism, and the relationship between phosphatidylcholine turnover and regulation of IN01 and other coregulated genes of phospholipid biosynthesis is discussed.
CITATION STYLE
Patton-Vogt, J. L., Griac, P., Sreenivas, A., Bruno, V., Dowd, S., Swede, M. J., & Henry, S. A. (1997). Role of the yeast phosphatidylinositol/phosphatidylcholine transfer protein (Sec14p) in phosphatidylcholine turnover and IN01 regulation. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 272(33), 20873–20883. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.33.20873
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