Autophagy is required for G <sub>1</sub> /G <sub>0</sub> quiescence in response to nitrogen starvation in <i>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</i>

Zhenyi An(Montavid Thermodynamic Research Group), Amina Tassa(Southwestern Medical Center), C. George Thomas(Southwestern Medical Center), Rui Zhong(Southwestern Medical Center), Guanghua Xiao(Southwestern Medical Center), Rati Fotedar(Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute), Benjamin P. Tu(Southwestern Medical Center), Daniel J. Klionsky(University of Michigan), Beth Levine(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Autophagy
August 12, 2014
Cited by 59Open Access
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Abstract

In response to starvation, cells undergo increased levels of autophagy and cell cycle arrest but the role of autophagy in starvation-induced cell cycle arrest is not fully understood. Here we show that autophagy genes regulate cell cycle arrest in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae during nitrogen starvation. While exponentially growing wild-type yeasts preferentially arrest in G₁/G₀ in response to starvation, yeasts carrying null mutations in autophagy genes show a significantly higher percentage of cells in G₂/M. In these autophagy-deficient yeast strains, starvation elicits physiological properties associated with quiescence, such as Snf1 activation, glycogen and trehalose accumulation as well as heat-shock resistance. However, while nutrient-starved wild-type yeasts finish the G₂/M transition and arrest in G₁/G 0₀ autophagy-deficient yeasts arrest in telophase. Our results suggest that autophagy is crucial for mitotic exit during starvation and appropriate entry into a G₁/G₀ quiescent state.


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