Citation |
Rodriguez-Lombardero S, Vizoso-Vazquez A, Lombardia LJ, Becerra M, Gonzalez-Siso MI, Cerdan ME. Sky1 regulates the expression of sulfur metabolism genes in response to cisplatin.
Microbiology (Reading, England), 2014. |
PubMed ID |
24763424
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Short Description |
Sky1 regulates the expression of sulfur metabolism genes in response to cisplatin. |
# of Conditions |
18 |
Full Description
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Cisplatin is commonly used in cancer therapy and yeast cells are also sensitive to this compound. We present a transcriptome analysis discriminating between RNA changes induced by cisplatin treatment, which are dependent on or independent of SKY1 function--a gene whose deletion increases resistance to the drug. Gene expression changes produced by addition of cisplatin to W303 and W303-Deltasky1 cells were recorded using DNA microarrays. The data, validated by quantitative PCR, revealed 122 differentially expressed genes: 69 upregulated and 53 downregulated. Among the upregulated genes, those related to sulfur metabolism were over-represented and partially dependent on Sky1. Deletions of MET4 or other genes encoding co-regulators of the expression of sulfur-metabolism-related genes, with the exception of MET28, did not modify the cisplatin sensitivity of yeast cells. One of the genes with the highest cisplatin-induced upregulation was SEO1, encoding a putative permease of sulfur compounds. We also measured the platinum, sulfur and glutathione content in W303, W303-Deltasky1 and W303-Deltaseo1 cells after cisplatin treatment, and integration of the data suggested that these transcriptional changes might represent a cellular response that allowed chelation of cisplatin with sulfur-containing amino acids and also helped DNA repair by stimulating purine biosynthesis. The transcription pattern of stimulation of sulfur-containing amino acids and purine synthesis decreased, or even disappeared, in the W303-Deltasky1 strain. |
Tags
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DNA damage stimulus, stress
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