Phenotypic effects of membrane protein overexpression in <i>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</i>
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103(30): 11148-11153
Article 2006 English
Authors
MÖ
Marie Österberg
HK
Hyun Kim
JW
Jonas Warringer
Abstract
1 min read
Large-scale protein overexpression phenotype screens provide an important complement to the more common gene knockout screens. Here, we have targeted the so far poorly understood Saccharomyces cerevisiae membrane proteome and report growth phenotypes for a strain collection overexpressing ≈600 C-terminally tagged integral membrane proteins grown both under normal and three different stress conditions. Although overexpression of most membrane proteins reduce the growth rate in synthetic defined medium, we identify a large number of proteins that, when overexpressed, confer specific resistance to various stress conditions. Our data suggest that regulation of glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor biosynthesis and the Na + /K + homeostasis system constitute major downstream targets of the yeast PKA/RAS pathway and point to a possible connection between the early secretory pathway and the cells’ response to oxidative stress. We also have quantified the expression levels for >550 membrane proteins, facilitating the choice of well expressing proteins for future functional and structural studies.
Behnaz Nowrouzi, Rachel Li, Laura E. Walls, Leopold d’Espaux, Koray Malcı, Liang Lungang, Nestor Jonguitud Borrego, Albert I. Lerma Escalera, José Rubén Morones‐Ramírez, Jay D Keasling, Leonardo Rios‐Solis
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