Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.418, No.3, 525-530, 2012
High copies of SUM1 enhance the stability of wild-type microtubules against adverse conditions in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
The budding yeast transcriptional repressor Sum1p binds to several promoters and recruits Hst1p, an NAD(+)-dependent histone deacetylase, at these promoters with the help of another protein Rfm1p. Hst1p causes repression of transcription by histone deacetylation of chromatin at its target promoters. In an earlier work we have shown that about 13-fold increase in Sum1p levels, brought about by expressing SUM1 from the high copy 2 micron plasmid (2 mu-SUM1), suppressed cold-sensitive growth phenotype associated with mutations in the alpha-tubulin gene TUB1. In this work we show that the dosage suppression is accompanied by an elevation of alpha-tubulin levels in mutant cells at their non-permissive growth temperature of 14 degrees C. Further, 2 mu-SUM1 significantly rescued the benomyl-supersensitive growth phenotype of mutant cells having wild-type tubulin subunits but a deficiency in tubulin folding cofactors. Finally, wild-type 2 mu-SUM1 transformants, having no known mutation in microtubule-related genes, displayed spindle microtubules which were substantially more stable than of wild-type control cells when challenged with microtubule-depolymerizing drugs. Therefore, we conclude that high copies of Sum1p stabilize microtubules against a variety of adverse and destabilizing conditions like mutations, low temperatures and drugs. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.