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RACK1/Asc1p, a Ribosomal Node in Cellular Signaling
ISSN
1535-9476
Date Issued
2013
Author(s)
Rachfall, Nicole
Schmitt, Kerstin
Bandau, Susanne
Smolinski, Nadine
Ehrenreich, Armin
DOI
10.1074/mcp.M112.017277
Abstract
RACK1/Asc1p and its essential orthologues in higher eukaryotes, such as RACK1 in metazoa, are involved in several distinct cellular signaling processes. The implications of a total deletion have never been assessed in a comprehensive manner. This study reveals the major cellular processes affected in a Saccharomyces cerevisiae Delta asc1 deletion background via de novo proteome and transcriptome analysis, as well as subsequent phenotypical characterizations. The deletion of ASC1 reduces iron uptake and causes nitrosative stress, both known indicators for hypoxia, which manifests in a shift of energy metabolism from respiration to fermentation in the Delta asc1 strain. Asc1p further impacts cellular metabolism through its regulative role in the MAP kinase signal transduction pathways of invasive/filamentous growth and cell wall integrity. In the Delta asc1 mutant strain, aberrations from the expected cellular response, mediated by these pathways, can be observed and are linked to changes in protein abundances of pathway-targeted transcription factors. Evidence of the translational regulation of such transcription factors suggests that ribosomal Asc1p is involved in signal transduction pathways and controls the biosynthesis of the respective final transcriptional regulators. Molecular & Cellular Proteomics 12: 10.1074/mcp.M112.017277, 87-105, 2013.