Coupling among growth rate response, metabolic cycle, and cell division cycle in yeast
Author(s)
Slavov, Nikolai G.; Botstein, David
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We studied the steady-state responses to changes in growth rate of yeast when ethanol is the sole source of carbon and energy. Analysis of these data, together with data from studies where glucose was the carbon source, allowed us to distinguish a “universal” growth rate response (GRR) common to all media studied from a GRR specific to the carbon source. Genes with positive universal GRR include ribosomal, translation, and mitochondrial genes, and those with negative GRR include autophagy, vacuolar, and stress response genes. The carbon source–specific GRR genes control mitochondrial function, peroxisomes, and synthesis of vitamins and cofactors, suggesting this response may reflect the intensity of oxidative metabolism. All genes with universal GRR, which comprise 25% of the genome, are expressed periodically in the yeast metabolic cycle (YMC). We propose that the universal GRR may be accounted for by changes in the relative durations of the YMC phases. This idea is supported by oxygen consumption data from metabolically synchronized cultures with doubling times ranging from 5 to 14 h. We found that the high oxygen consumption phase of the YMC can coincide exactly with the S phase of the cell division cycle, suggesting that oxidative metabolism and DNA replication are not incompatible.
Date issued
2011-06Department
MIT Materials Research LaboratoryJournal
Molecular Biology of the Cell
Publisher
American Society for Cell Biology
Citation
Slavov, N., and D. Botstein. “Coupling among growth rate response, metabolic cycle, and cell division cycle in yeast.” Molecular Biology of the Cell 22 (2011): 1997-2009.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1059-1524
1939-4586