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Toward a global analysis of metabolites in regulatory mutants of yeast

by: ElizabethM Humston, KennethM Dombek, BenjaminP Tu, EltonT Young, RobertE Synovec
Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry In Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, Vol. 401, No. 8. (17 March 2011), pp. 2387-2402, doi:10.1007/s00216-011-4800-2  Key: citeulike:9048525

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Abstract

The AMP-activated protein kinase in yeast, Snf1, coordinates expression and activity of numerous intracellular signaling and developmental pathways, including those regulating cellular differentiation, response to stress, meiosis, autophagy, and the diauxic transition. Snf1 phosphorylates metabolic enzymes and transcription factors to change cellular physiology and metabolism. Adr1 and Cat8, transcription factors that activate gene expression after the diauxic transition, are regulated by Snf1; Cat8 through direct phosphorylation and Adr1 by dephosphorylation in a Snf1-dependent manner. Adr1 and Cat8 coordinately regulate numerous genes encoding enzymes of gluconeogenesis, the glyoxylate cycle, β-oxidation of fatty acids, and the utilization of alternative fermentable sugars and nonfermentable substrates. To determine the roles of Adr1, Cat8, and Snf1 in metabolism, two-dimensional gas chromatography coupled to time-of-flight mass spectrometry and liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry were used to identify metabolites whose levels change after the diauxic transition in wild-type-, ADR1-, CAT8-, and SNF1-deficient yeast. A discovery-based approach to data analysis utilized chemometric algorithms to identify, quantify, and compare 63 unique metabolites between wild type, adr1∆, cat8∆, adr1∆cat8∆, and snf1∆ strains. The primary metabolites found to differ were those of gluconeogenesis, the glyoxylate and tricarboxylic acid cycles, and amino acid metabolism. In general, good agreement was observed between the levels of metabolites derived from these pathways and the levels of transcripts from the same strains, suggesting that transcriptional control plays a major role in regulating the levels of metabolites after the diauxic transition. Figure Metabolite data for wild type and mutant yeast strains were studied utilizing GC × GC-TOFMS and LC-MS/MS combined with chemometric data analysis. Using PCA as a comparison tool, the mutant strain adr1∆ behaved similar to the wildtype, while snf1∆, cat8∆, and adr1∆cat8∆ behaved similar to each other, when all strains were grown in nonfermentable media


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