Identification of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Isoleucyl-tRNA Synthetase as a Target of the G1-specific Inhibitor Reveromycin A

Yuji Miyamoto(Hiroshima University), Kiyotaka Machida(RIKEN), Masaki Mizunuma(Hiroshima University), Yuji Emoto(Hiroshima University), Naomi Sato(Hiroshima University), Kohji Miyahara(Hiroshima University), Dai Hirata(Hiroshima University), Takeo Usui(RIKEN), Hidetoshi Takahashi(RIKEN), Hiroyuki Osada(RIKEN), Tokichi Miyakawa(Hiroshima University)
Journal of Biological Chemistry
August 1, 2002
Cited by 90Open Access
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Abstract

To dissect the action mechanism of reveromycin A (RM-A), a G(1)-specific inhibitor, a Saccharomyces cerevisiae dominant mutant specifically resistant to RM-A, was isolated from a strain in which the genes implicated in nonspecific multidrug resistance had been deleted. The mutant gene (YRR2-1) responsible for the resistance was identified as an allele of the ILS1 gene encoding tRNA(Ile) synthetase (IleRS). The activity of IleRS, but not several other aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases examined in wild type cell extract, was highly sensitive to RM-A (IC(50) = 8 ng/ml). The IleRS activity of the YRR2-1 mutant was 4-fold more resistant to the inhibitor compared with that of wild type. The mutation IleRS(N660D), near the KMSKS consensus sequence commonly found in the class I aminoacyl transferases, was found to be responsible for RM-A resistance. Moreover, overexpression of the ILS1 gene from a high-copy plasmid conferred RM-A resistance. These results indicated that IleRS is a target of RM-A in vivo. A defect of the GCN2 gene led to decreased RM-A resistance. IleRS inhibition by RM-A led to transcriptional activation of the ILS1 gene via the Gcn2-Gcn4 general amino acid control pathway, and this autoregulation seemed to contribute to RM-A resistance.


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