Expression of Human Protein Phosphatase-1 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Highlights the Role of Phosphatase Isoforms in Regulating Eukaryotic Functions

Human (PP1) isoforms, PP1α, PP1β, PP1γ1, and PP1γ2, differ in primary sequences at N and C termini that potentially bind cellular regulators and define their physiological functions. The GLC7 gene encodes the PP1 catalytic subunit with >80% sequence identity to human PP1 and is essential for viab...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2007-07, Vol.282 (30), p.21838-21847
Hauptverfasser: Gibbons, Jennifer A., Kozubowski, Lukasz, Tatchell, Kelly, Shenolikar, Shirish
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Human (PP1) isoforms, PP1α, PP1β, PP1γ1, and PP1γ2, differ in primary sequences at N and C termini that potentially bind cellular regulators and define their physiological functions. The GLC7 gene encodes the PP1 catalytic subunit with >80% sequence identity to human PP1 and is essential for viability of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In yeast, Glc7p regulates glycogen and protein synthesis, actin cytoskeleton, gene expression, and cell division. We substituted human PP1 for Glc7p in yeast to investigate the ability of individual isoforms to catalyze Glc7p functions. S. cerevisiae expressing human PP1 isoforms were viable. PP1α-expressing yeast grew more rapidly than strains expressing other isoforms. On the other hand, PP1α-expressing yeast accumulated less glycogen than PP1β-or PP1γ1-expressing yeast. Yeast expressing human PP1 were indistinguishable from WT yeast in glucose derepression. However, unlike WT yeast, strains expressing human PP1 failed to sporulate. Analysis of chimeric PP1α/β subunits highlighted a critical role for their unique N termini in defining PP1α and PP1β functions in yeast. Biochemical studies established that the differing association of PP1 isoforms with the yeast glycogen-targeting subunit, Gac1p, accounted for their differences in glycogen synthesis. In contrast to human PP1 expressed in Escherichia coli, enzymes expressed in yeast displayed in vitro biochemical properties closely resembling PP1 from mammalian tissues. Thus, PP1 expression in yeast should facilitate future structure-function studies of this protein serine/threonine phosphatase.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M701272200